Picked this up today at my local lidl. Comes with two small reels of solder and a spare flat screwdriver shaped tip. Main tip is conical. Needed a new iron as my other one has too large a tip for delicate PCB work. Temp control as well which is nice.
3 year warranty as well!
All comments (42)
sradmad
25 Jan 17#1
good find op, heat added
MisterSkinflint
25 Jan 17#2
I had a look at this in store and in fairness it looks like a bargain. Heat.
steptoe to MisterSkinflint
25 Jan 171#3
Agreed, gutted as I just bought the £13 prime nutool 48W at Amazon last week. Heat
Cheapasnowt
25 Jan 171#4
I've got one. Haven't used it but seems to be decent especially considering the price for some basic needs.
bob_regis
25 Jan 171#5
I am slowly becoming obsessed with this channel....
If you are into soldering then you might find it interesting.
PS. I have no idea what he is talking about (I bake cakes for a living)!
jeeeeeez
25 Jan 17#6
I've had one of these from lidl for a year or two now, I use it a couple of times a month and think it's great.
OldEngine
25 Jan 171#7
Looks good!
Agent004
25 Jan 172#8
Getting this as it's one of those things that are sure to come in handy , Heat added :smile:
Jabaltariq
25 Jan 17#9
Voted hot! I'm one of those people that is guilty of practicing what some might call a false economy, I don't need one but I'll surely be buying one tomorrow. when you compare the quality of some the items sold at Lidl, to some of the rubbish that is sold by other retailers at twice, sometimes three times the price, you can't help but wonder...How do they do it?
Had one of these a couple of years now. Can't complain. Decent enough iron for the price and paid for itself with money saved from things I've repaired. Handy having little drawer with solder in it too.
ascen
26 Jan 17#12
With these where would you get extra spare tips from?
ravilakhani to ascen
26 Jan 171#13
I've been waiting for someone to ask for 'just the tip'
jimjim79 to ascen
26 Jan 171#14
I have a lidl one very similar, it takes a screw in tip
The tips for this one are screw in as well, thanks for the Tip... see what I did there... :laughing:
barneyonion
26 Jan 17#16
Have you been watching the AVE channel on youtube then?!!
barneyonion
26 Jan 17#17
Big clive is brilliant, hes a lunatic, drinking methylated spirits and setting things on fire... great channel.
pjazzy
26 Jan 17#18
This will be perfect to mend my kids train set which I bought from Lidl. One of the wires connecting to the battery came off :confused:
ericroseden
26 Jan 17#19
Hot! When switched on.
JamesUK
26 Jan 17#20
Clive didn't like the methylated spirits...
Although may be a YouTube thing to like a drink. Clive likes his whiskey and beer... Ashens likes his Gin.....
Whittick88
26 Jan 17#21
just picked one up thanks! hopefully this will give me a kick up the ass to do something with my arduino
willyzippy89
26 Jan 17#22
Right im a complete noob here but i broke a 2ds and needed to unsolder some connections, i got a 30w solder that didnt even un-solder the connections
Im guessing i need a 50-60w to do this??? Thanks
DrTerror to willyzippy89
26 Jan 17#25
:confused:
urmum to willyzippy89
26 Jan 17#30
Did you use flux?
hcc27
26 Jan 17#23
Thanks dude. That's a tonne of information thrown at you in an hour - love it!!
Be79n
26 Jan 17#24
I can not see it on there website?
therealjohnpeat
26 Jan 17#26
Assuming you're not trying to unsolder spot-welds ( :smiley: ) a hotter iron MIGHT help but it MIGHT also melt/destroy the components you're trying to remove, care will be required.
Biggest issue with unsoldering SM (surface-mounted - likely in the 2DS?) components is getting multiple connections off at the same time (otherwise each re-solders as you unsolder the other) - and for that, a hot-air-rework station is required (and they're not cheap!)
therealjohnpeat
26 Jan 17#27
Youtube electronics videos offer the full range of experiences - Uncle AVE is just the BEST source of manly man-skills and Big Clive is the Bob Ross of electronics but Louis Rossman offers both advanced Apple repairs and a disintegrating personality disorder which is hard to not watch and be horrified at...
eset12345 to therealjohnpeat
26 Jan 17#28
sounds like someone has some man crushes
pibpob
26 Jan 17#29
Note that these will not be temperature regulated, meaning that they can't react to the varying demands made on them during the soldering process and the temperature will thus vary a great deal.
willyzippy89
26 Jan 17#31
If you mean flux paste then yeah?? Like i said im complete noob
urgurinder
26 Jan 17#32
worth it for the 3 year guarantee.. although if you only need to use iot once a year then pick something up from ebay for about half that price.. heat added for guarantee and immediate collection (as opposed to waiting for a month delivery from ebay china)
willyzippy89
26 Jan 17#33
Thanks for the help
I checked a video on youtube on how to replace and repair the card reader i watched the person do it and he was using a standard solder "/
He simply touched the points that were soldered and it then came loose pulling it off then soldering the connections with the new part
Looked simple to me haha
118luke
26 Jan 171#34
They've been selling these for about 10 years (on and off)
i bought one around 10 years ago and i clearly remember it blowing up after about 1.5 years, but ill be honest it was kept in the shed when not in use.
It has put me off getting another one mind.
slannmage
26 Jan 17#35
Your soldering Iron most likely sucks, everywhere I've worked the make of choice has been Weller. You could be doing something wrong, but if your iron isn't even ding anything then it's not hot enough. I assume you have solder on a reel, which means it's most likely got flux in it, so just put the soldering iron tip on the joint and then add the solder to the tip and if it's not doing anything to the joint then it's not hot enough.... that's if it's doing anything to the solder.
You don't need to buy separate flux tbh, really you only need it for chips that have multiple legs close together, it just makes it easy and stops you from shorting them legs out.
But most likely the Iron isn't hot enough, the solder on those boards is rated at a high temp, probably need to crank it up to 400c.
dheydl
26 Jan 17#36
I bought this last time it came around. Was £7.99 then I think. The tip is too large for delicate PCB work unless your components are spread far apart, which isn't likely these days. Ended up having to buy again with something more suitable from Maplin.
barneyonion to dheydl
26 Jan 171#37
I can confirm the tip on this one is very small. I have two other irons and this is the smallest of the three.
m1chau
27 Jan 17#38
Is the wire connecting the iron with the station soft, slilicone-like?
Fistral
27 Jan 17#39
I can't find these either online or in store. What date were they on sale?
barneyonion to Fistral
27 Jan 17#40
They were on sale from last Sunday but there were still some in my local Lidl during the week.
Midnight Tboy
28 Jan 17#41
tried our local lidl on the day this was posted but no joy :disappointed: Shame, could really do with a higher watt one too.
I wish lidl would sort their horrid website out too
maxmix
30 Jan 17#42
Plenty in our local Lidl, just bought the one, certainly not going to be as good as my solder station with hot air, but looks good as a spare :wink: maxmix (No where near Antex or Weller quality)
Opening post
3 year warranty as well!
All comments (42)
If you are into soldering then you might find it interesting.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bVoBZqlvCKo
PS. I have no idea what he is talking about (I bake cakes for a living)!
I buy these:
http://cpc.farnell.com/duratool/d00803-b8-1/spare-tip-d00803/dp/SD01785?CMP=TREML007-005
Although may be a YouTube thing to like a drink. Clive likes his whiskey and beer... Ashens likes his Gin.....
Im guessing i need a 50-60w to do this??? Thanks
Biggest issue with unsoldering SM (surface-mounted - likely in the 2DS?) components is getting multiple connections off at the same time (otherwise each re-solders as you unsolder the other) - and for that, a hot-air-rework station is required (and they're not cheap!)
I checked a video on youtube on how to replace and repair the card reader i watched the person do it and he was using a standard solder "/
He simply touched the points that were soldered and it then came loose pulling it off then soldering the connections with the new part
Looked simple to me haha
i bought one around 10 years ago and i clearly remember it blowing up after about 1.5 years, but ill be honest it was kept in the shed when not in use.
It has put me off getting another one mind.
You don't need to buy separate flux tbh, really you only need it for chips that have multiple legs close together, it just makes it easy and stops you from shorting them legs out.
But most likely the Iron isn't hot enough, the solder on those boards is rated at a high temp, probably need to crank it up to 400c.
I wish lidl would sort their horrid website out too