Hello everyone, I hope this isn't too basic a question, hopefully not for the beginners section.
I own a somewhat cheap soldering iron. It plugs directly into the wall, has a little temperature dial (I don't think it's temperature controlled, I suspect the little dial just limits the amount of power getting dumped into the heater) and uses the same tips and heater core as a Hakko 907.
I recently had to replace my mouse button switches, they are the 3 legged micro switches. No real drama de-soldering and re-soldering the switches, don't think I overheated anything, didn't burn any traces or pads. Just simple through-hole stuff.
However after a day of use the mouse intermittently wouldn't connect to my PC (it's a wireless mouse). After 3 days the problem was permanent. I checked ribbon cables to the optical sensor, made sure I hadn't bridged anything on the mouse's motherboard, heck I even got the schematics for the radio IC to make sure it had power and enable, made sure the main processor IC had power, etc and I can't figure out what's wrong with it, so I bought a replacement mouse motherboard.
I don't have the skills to diagnose the board, but it still hangs on my mind and I want to learn from it.
So the real question is:
My soldering iron doesn't seem to have a grounded tip. When I connect my multimeter to the tip and to the earth pin of the UK 3 pin plug it reads OL. Opening the top collar to expose the heater connections shows it just has 2 wires to the heater and nothing to the metalwork that holds the tip.
Can my soldering iron have damaged something on my mouse because of this?
I don't understand why the tip would need to be grounded, how does charge build up on the tip when all it touches is a ceramic heater, surely the ceramic is an insulator, I can't imagine the tip is live when it's in use?
Is this soldering iron basically useless for anything that involves ICs, or is there something I can do to reduce the likelihood of damage?
Sorry if this is basic, but I've tried to read explanations of soldering iron grounding and "leakage" but it's over my head. Does the tip and the ceramic heater act like some kind of capacitor? Even if it does why would it be able to discharge into the workpiece pcb, wouldn't there need to be a path to ground from the PCB to get current flow?
Any help would be appreciated. Thanks!