You are not that dude that was recommending mercury as a low temp solder for component desoldering in one rather infamous video, by chance?SECTION IV- HEALTH HAZARDS Primary Routes of Entry: Fume inhalation, ingestion, skin, and eyes.Signs and Symptoms of Exposure: 1) Acute Effects: Reddening of eyes and skin, acid stomach if ingested, inhalation may cause respiratory tract irritation.
I'm new to soldering and have pretty bad Asthma and don't want to make it worse. Has anyone had experience with Superior No. 30 SuperSafe, a rosin alternative or anything else like that? I can get a fume extractor but I'm curious if anything is safer as I only do a little soldering.
I always heard the water based (which tend to require immediate thorough cleaning totally incompatible with a prototype or hobby workflow) and synthetic fluxes have harsher fumes.
Hi, have you tried any of these?
https://weldingmastermind.com/heres-this-soldering-flux-alternative-you-must-check-out/
I'm new to soldering and have pretty bad Asthma and don't want to make it worse. Has anyone had experience with Superior No. 30 SuperSafe, a rosin alternative or anything else like that? I can get a fume extractor but I'm curious if anything is safer as I only do a little soldering.
i have a bad asthma too. but changing soldering flux won't help.
1. buy a good fume extractor. i cannot stress this enough.
2. get a room air purifier. any air purifier will do.
Do a search on PubMed for colophony disease..
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/?sort=date&term=colophony+asthma
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/?sort=date&term=colophonyI'm new to soldering and have pretty bad Asthma and don't want to make it worse. Has anyone had experience with Superior No. 30 SuperSafe, a rosin alternative or anything else like that? I can get a fume extractor but I'm curious if anything is safer as I only do a little soldering.
Rather than a fume extractor, which claim to clean air but rarely do much more than dilute it by blowing it around, get a double fan that (both) sucks up the smoke and exhausts it outside, while at the same time bringing in fresh outdoor air to replace the exhausted air. To save energy you can use a heat X-changer between the two lines, so the outward going air warms the incoming stream. This is done using a sort of X shaped vent and heat sink structure..The X denotes the two air flows in close proximity to one another.. made of folded aluminum. That should be able to recover more than 60% of the otherwise lost heat.
See "heat recovery ventilator" This will also help prevent COVID transmission without people freezing at work. Saving a lot of money year round.
Most if not all of the supposed fume extractors I have seen are probably expensive and near worthless for people with colophony allergy because activated charcoal is used up very quickly, and even gets used up when the fan is not on.
The only activated charcoal filters that work for removing toxic fumes are very large, require huge stic pressures in other words large motors, and are expensive, the filters are very pricey.
A good point, this can be as simple as a vacuum cleaner ducted outside. I've not tried it but have often wondered if a cheap 12V bilge fan would pull hard enough.
i have a bad asthma too. but changing soldering flux won't help.
1. buy a good fume extractor. i cannot stress this enough.
2. get a room air purifier. any air purifier will do.
Do a search on PubMed for colophony disease..
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/?sort=date&term=colophony+asthma
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/?sort=date&term=colophonyI'm new to soldering and have pretty bad Asthma and don't want to make it worse. Has anyone had experience with Superior No. 30 SuperSafe, a rosin alternative or anything else like that? I can get a fume extractor but I'm curious if anything is safer as I only do a little soldering.
Rather than a fume extractor, which claim to clean air but rarely do much more than dilute it by blowing it around, get a double fan that (both) sucks up the smoke and exhausts it outside, while at the same time bringing in fresh outdoor air to replace the exhausted air. To save energy you can use a heat X-changer between the two lines, so the outward going air warms the incoming stream. This is done using a sort of X shaped vent and heat sink structure..The X denotes the two air flows in close proximity to one another.. made of folded aluminum. That should be able to recover more than 60% of the otherwise lost heat.
See "heat recovery ventilator" This will also help prevent COVID transmission without people freezing at work. Saving a lot of money year round.
Most if not all of the supposed fume extractors I have seen are probably expensive and near worthless for people with colophony allergy because activated charcoal is used up very quickly, and even gets used up when the fan is not on.
The only activated charcoal filters that work for removing toxic fumes are very large, require huge stic pressures in other words large motors, and are expensive, the filters are very pricey.1. It might be wiser to search using non-archaic terminology: “rosin”, not “colophony”.
2. Is your reply based on any facts? It sounds an awful lot like pure opinion.
3. Activated charcoal isn’t even reeeeally that critical for flux fumes: the problem particulate matter is trapped by purely mechanical filters. A HEPA filter will already do wonders. (Look at the secondary filters on desoldering stations to see what it looks like.) Fume extractors are basically very expensive, comparatively quiet vacuum cleaners with big filters.
This goes back to my question for the OP: is the concern avoiding long-term exposure to prevent general aggravation of the asthma, or is the concern avoiding sporadic acute exposure to fumes because they can trigger asthma attacks? These scenarios have very different demands.
Rather than a fume extractor, which claim to clean air but rarely do much more than dilute it by blowing it around, get a double fan that (both) sucks up the smoke and exhausts it outside, while at the same time bringing in fresh outdoor air to replace the exhausted air. To save energy you can use a heat X-changer between the two lines, so the outward going air warms the incoming stream. This is done using a sort of X shaped vent and heat sink structure..The X denotes the two air flows in close proximity to one another.. made of folded aluminum. That should be able to recover more than 60% of the otherwise lost heat.