I'm genuinely curious, i never really tried a temperature higher than about 300 since i found it to work, and it seems that the "slower" heating of ~300C makes it less risky when repairing vintage PCBs which may not be in great shape and require lots of care when performing maintenance.I was googling yesterday shopping for new tips for my iron, and somehow stumbled upon not one but several discussions online where many people say they solder around 370-400C always.

i almost always have a very fine pencil tip on my iron.
and it seems that the "slower" heating of ~300C makes it less risky
heating of ~300C makes it less risky when repairing vintage PCBs which may not be in great shape and require lots of care when performing maintenance.
i almost always have a very fine pencil tip on my iron.I usually use 2 or 2.4mm mm (0,08" or 0.1") chisel tip even for 0603 SMT. It's best to use largest tip you can for the job. Does not matter if it's twice larger than pad. This way you can do job faster and better. I use small tips only in some special cases as they provide way worse heat transfer. If solder joint does not melt within 1 second, you are doing something wrong.Quoteand it seems that the "slower" heating of ~300C makes it less riskyIf you heat for several seconds at "low" temperature, and especially if you strongly push tip onto solder joint during that time, it's actually way worse for PCB rather than soldering much faster at higher temperature.
Have you seen the old Pace videos on youtube? They explain just about everything you need to know. Even though they are a bit dated they are still applicable today.
It's not often, but there are times i have to strongly push the tip and wait a second or two for the solder to properly flow.
I have not looked into the benefits of lead free solder at all,

QuoteI have not looked into the benefits of lead free solder at all,Don't even bother unless you're into production or are forced to by legislation.
Electronics should be enjoyable not a way to accelerate baldness !
QuoteI have not looked into the benefits of lead free solder at all,Don't even bother unless you're into production or are forced to by legislation.
Electronics should be enjoyable not a way to accelerate baldness !But if you can get nice solder joints with lead-free, soldering with leaded solder feels uncannily too easy.
QuoteI have not looked into the benefits of lead free solder at all,Don't even bother unless you're into production or are forced to by legislation.
Electronics should be enjoyable not a way to accelerate baldness !But if you can get nice solder joints with lead-free, soldering with leaded solder feels uncannily too easy.Maybe i will buy a small roll of lead-free and try to improve my skills
I'm a little surprised that people are comfortable with over 300C.
My go-to is lead solder, a knife tip, and a temperature of 260C. I only go higher if something isn't working, and then I'm very careful about heat damage.
I feel that I should be working at 240C and am cheating with 260C. I'm a little surprised that people are comfortable with over 300C.
My go-to is lead solder, a knife tip, and a temperature of 260C. I only go higher if something isn't working, and then I'm very careful about heat damage.
I feel that I should be working at 240C and am cheating with 260C. I'm a little surprised that people are comfortable with over 300C.
My go-to is lead solder, a knife tip, and a temperature of 260C. I only go higher if something isn't working, and then I'm very careful about heat damage.
I feel that I should be working at 240C and am cheating with 260C. I'm a little surprised that people are comfortable with over 300C.Is your station temp accurate ? How would you know ?
I use a 120W TS1200A with TSS02 tips. Most of my soldering is done at 185C (365F) with 63/37 solder and always get excellent results with little fouling of the tips.
The look on your face when you discover the station is displaying Celsius temp and you thought you were reading Fahrenheit will be priceless.