Electronics > Projects, Designs, and Technical Stuff
Sharing damn simple cheap alternative to expensive Hakko FG-100 thermometer
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mcinque:
Nothing particularly fancy or complicated here, something that even a monkey can do...
Instead spending $$$ for the overpriced Hakko FG-100 to check solder irons calibration, I guess it's damn cheap (and damn easy) to use this kind of pcb and a meter with K thermocouple input and purchase only the cheap 191-212 hakko sensors.
I found this way better than simply using a K thermocouple on the iron tip because the Hakko sensor is much more stable and I can get repeatable readings and the sensor thermocouple is housed inside a small metal cage to avoid adding metals to the bimetallic junction while measuring tin temperature, falsing the readings.
- connections are made with 1.8mm RC battery contacts (females are soldered to the pcb, males are used to "hold" the Hakko sensor, the sensor height is optimal)
- pcb is attached
Maybe someone can find this useful, even if it's so damn simple that anyone can do it.
GreyWoolfe:
Why not get a Hakko FG-100 knockoff? Under $12 USD from China. They even work fairly well. I have one.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/FG-100-Soldering-Iron-Tip-Thermometer-Temperature-Tester-LCD-Display-0-700-DIY/192691374192?hash=item2cdd4d0870:g:iUIAAOSwGWJcUW1S:rk:3:pf:1&frcectupt=true
mcinque:
--- Quote from: GreyWoolfe on February 23, 2019, 07:27:31 pm ---Why not get a Hakko FG-100 knockoff?
--- End quote ---
Mostly because of calibration: you can't calibrate some versions as they are manufactured by different "companies" each one with a different PCBs inside, attached examples, one is without calibration. Since I can't know which kind of fake I'm buying, and since I already have a digital thermometer with K thermocouple input, I preferred to choose this way.
EDIT: maybe you can add calibration to the second pcb by adding VR1 but I don't like this kind of incertainess and the crappy soldering and flux residues.
amyk:
The temperature-voltage dependency of a thermocouple is exact, that does not need calibration after it leaves the factory.
mcinque:
Indeed, but the voltmeter reading the thermocouple value won't require a basic calibration? Mostly because we're reading millivolts.
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