For some reason those Ersa images won't load. Ersas are good stations but there are a few things new players need to know going in. They use a tip/heater system a with screw on collar, though they out perform the majority of the stations out there they also have less accurate regulation which is the downside of that extra performance.
On what do you base that claim? I've seen no evidence whatsoever of them having poor regulation, and note that all of the i-Con stations have three selectable "power" settings, which are really the aggressiveness setting, letting you choose between very aggressive heating with larger overshoot, conservative heating with no overshoot, or the default middle setting which has very minor overshoot.
The Ersa system is basically a very precision-engineered and manufactured "traditional" tip/heater system, such that despite being separate tip/heater, the thermal coupling is so good that it gets you 90% of the way to a cartridge system. (I mean, a Hakko tip/heater iron takes 40 seconds to heat up, the Ersa takes 9, far closer to the 5 secs of a cartridge system than not.)
Comparatively Metcal, JBC and Pace cartridge based stations also have great performance, are faster heating and easier to swap tips on. Plus Metcal and Pace are both accurate regulating and calibration free.
No doubt the cartridge systems are superior. In a way, I'm surprised Ersa hasn't released a cartridge system that's compatible with the i-Con series, either by replacing the whole handle, or by replacing the heater (which itself is socketed) with a socket adapter to accept cartridges.
With Ersa and Hakko you can buy extra collars/sleeves to make swapping tips a bit more efficient, but there is just no reason to with cartridge based stations.
The Ersa collars are a pain in the butt, insofar as they snap onto a tip very snugly, so you really have no choice but to get one sleeve per tip. At least you can reuse it if you ever need to replace a worn out tip like-for-like. On the bright side, the Ersa collars don't get hot, so you can swap hot tips without any kind of tool.
Both Ersa and Pace have relatively cheaper tips in comparison to most cartridge based stations.
Yes. Though I find it curious that Pace is able to sell many tip geometries at FAR lower cost than Ersa, despite being cartridges!! For example, while a standard chisel tip for either one is about $11, the drag soldering tips (Ersa MiniWell, Pace MiniWave) differ massively, with Pace still charging something like $11, compared to $35 for Ersa.
Though it's promoted as a benefit, in my opinion having any complex circuitry in the handpiece can be a double edged sword when it comes to reliability.
Well, has it actually proven to be a reliability liability? Your logic is absolutely correct in theory, but in practice, it could be totally fine.
For sure, I haven't heard of Ersa handles being unusually failure-prone, and to the best of my knowledge, they're the most electronically complex ones on the market (ignoring the TS100/TS80), containing an Atmel Mega88 MCU and a MEMS accelerometer. (Since the Ersa stores the tip calibration in the handle itself, I assume the MCU is responsible for both interpreting the accelerometer as well as using its internal EEPROM for the calibration constants.) They're potted and contain no electrolytics, so quite likely to be very durable even long term.
this post has a teardown.
For what it's worth, if I were going to buy a new station today, I'd buy a Pace instead of an Ersa, thanks to the ADS200 being so affordable. But it's also fair to say that I'm not dissatisfied with my Ersa i-Con nano, it's performed very well. My three big gripes are 1) the non-backlit LCD, 2) the up/down buttons instead of a knob (and inability to have both presets AND arbitrary temperature*), and 3) the poor availability of Ersa tips in Switzerland. But the first two would have been eliminated if I'd gotten a more expensive i-Con model, and the third isn't a deficiency in the design. (Pace doesn't have much in the way of local distribution here, either, but since Farnell carries them, it's easy to order from abroad without nasty customs surprises. Ersa, on the other hand, blocked Amazon and others from selling to Switzerland...)
*on the i-Con nano and pico, you can use a microSD card to configure the station to use the up/down buttons to
either let you set a temperature,
or to switch between three presets that you predefine via the SD card. But there's no way to have presets that you can override if needed. The SD card is also how you configure the power (aggressiveness) setting, the setback and sleep timers, etc.