Can anyone advise me what would be a good, safe yet affordable soldering station for a beginner of 12 years old? She will be soldering under supervision, but I'd like the station to be properly safe in spite of lower cost. Use: single/dual layer, mostly through hole to begin with.
Please note, I'm in the EU, Hakko is
expensive here
I have had excellent experience with Ersa
The Pico is a bit over 100 euros
The digital 40W Weller is around the same price. Haven't used it myself, but I guess you cannot go that wrong with Weller.
Everything else I used that is cheaper is also Chinese so ...
I thought about the Pico. A bit more than I want to spend, but mainly the rather mixed reviews on sites like Amazon.de are what make me look to other options. The Weller I have no experience with, but I have read the red Wellers were not recommended.
Is there any Chinese brand or type you have experience with and can recommend? I saw Dave's 'recommendation' (in his video on a low cost lab) of the Yihua, but looking at the insides make me wonder about safety and if it is safe for a kid.
I'd say get the cheap Ternma Farnell sells :
http://uk.farnell.com/tenma/21-10115-eu/soldering-station-60w-220v-eu/dp/2062627 Here's the Belgium version of their website (with Dutch text and with prices in Euro , and note may not include VAT) :
http://be.farnell.com/tenma/21-10115-eu/soldering-station-60w-220v-eu/dp/2062627Tenma is Farnell's brand, the station is a rebranded Atten 980D which is in turn a "digital" hakko 936 clone like the Yihua Dave reviewed and like all the clones from Atten and Yihua. The tips are like the Hakko , the handpiece is like it (connector may be slightly different) etc etc
But you get 1 year warranty from Farnell, better than buying a clone from eBay where you'd have to send the station back to China if there's problems or just take the loss.
You can find tips and handpieces on eBay cheaper than you find on Farnell's website.
A handpiece with cable and tip is something like 10-15$, not expensive at all (just be careful to get the one with 5 pin female connector like your station needs)
but mainly the rather mixed reviews on sites like Amazon.de are what make me look to other options.
Dunno if you can call 4.4 stars out of 5 on amazon.de and 4.7 on amazon UK a "mixed reviews". There are no better options at this price. Next better is i-con nano at much higher price. All of what is cheaper including that tenma suggested is much much worse.
Dunno if you can call 4.4 stars out of 5 on amazon.de and 4.7 on amazon UK a "mixed reviews". There are no better options at this price. Next better is i-con nano at much higher price. All of what is cheaper including that tenma suggested is much much worse.
I read about a few DOAs that showed not so good assembly quality, and a handle that gets pretty hot (since it does not have a sleep mode, small wonder).
If I want to go below the 107 EUR of the pico, is there any alternative you could recommend? Or is it all crap in EU? Folks in the US have it easy, with the Hakko FX888D costing well below 100.
I have had the ERSA RDS 80 for many years. No problems with it apart from the fact that the DIN socket is plastic and not locking. It is a bit loose after so much use.
I do not know the quality on the lower models, but I have had a good experience with the brand. Tips are about 20 euros here in Greece.
If you go for something Chinese, I would suggest that you buy it locally and from a respectable store. This way you can be sure that you have a valid CE certification. And you can double check the grounding just to be sure. And of course, make sure that you test your RCD regularly.
I bought the ZD-917 this way a few months back and couldn't be happier. I pretty much haven't used my ERSA since. The tips are dirt cheap and seem very durable with proper cleaning and maintenance (I tend to be a bit overprotective with them anyway)
The Yihua and Rhino devices that Dave reviewed are from the same family, just newer models.
Dunno if you can call 4.4 stars out of 5 on amazon.de and 4.7 on amazon UK a "mixed reviews". There are no better options at this price. Next better is i-con nano at much higher price. All of what is cheaper including that tenma suggested is much much worse.
I read about a few DOAs that showed not so good assembly quality, and a handle that gets pretty hot (since it does not have a sleep mode, small wonder).
If I want to go below the 107 EUR of the pico, is there any alternative you could recommend? Or is it all crap in EU? Folks in the US have it easy, with the Hakko FX888D costing well below 100.
So what, a few people out of bunch wrote about DOA? That is generally what you get with any product, on top of that people report bad experience more often than good. FX888D is completely inferior compared with i-con pico, frankly. Pico has sleep mode, although not as good as in higher end i-con stations which have accelerometer in the handle.
I have had the ERSA RDS 80 for many years. No problems with it apart from the fact that the DIN socket is plastic and not locking. It is a bit loose after so much use.
I do not know the quality on the lower models, but I have had a good experience with the brand. Tips are about 20 euros here in Greece.
Dunno where you find ERSA tips for EUR 20, they cost < EUR 10 for popular types. RDS-80 is completely outdated low end model and not even close to i-con series.
Do you have 12~20V power supply? Of so, check out this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sDMhh3p2nuM.
A bit expensive, but still cheaper than a genuine Weller/Hakko.
I have TS100, it's a great portable soldering iron to use occasionally, but I would not recommend it for general use. Main problems are that grip is completely uncomfortable, and high distance from tip to grip.
If you want a reliable and safe soldering station ERSA Pico is a good option for that. If you want extra, ESD protection, grounded tip, etc, look also to Nano.
Another good option (is not a soldering station but a very good soldering iron for the intended target) is a Antex XS25.
Another good option (is not a soldering station but a very good soldering iron for the intended target) is a Antex XS25.
This is the iron I bought for my RC track days where I did not want to carry the station.
Very nice quality, but it has a very stiff and heavy cable and you can very easily knock it off without a very sturdy base that properly secures the hot part.
Oh, and it's rather weak. If there is a ground plane or something with extra mass it takes forever to heat it to a proper temperature.
I actually have the 15W as well, which is even more awkward to use with the huge thick cable.
What might be interesting from a safety point of view, is the one they have which can be powered by a 12V DC supply or battery. If of course you do not mind a plain soldering iron for your applications. It could be useful to you as well.
http://www.antex.co.uk/soldering/precision-range-soldering-irons/mlxs/
Any 936 clone would probably be fine, just check the grounding of the tip.
Can anyone advise me what would be a good, safe yet affordable soldering station for a beginner of 12 years old? She will be soldering under supervision, but I'd like the station to be properly safe in spite of lower cost. Use: single/dual layer, mostly through hole to begin with.
There is no such thing as a safe soldering station: one end is pointed and hot
If there is a chance that a youngster will try something and then lose interest, buying something very cheap is a good idea. In addition, it would probably be sufficient for a beginner's jobs, and you will learn what you really
need (not want!).
For decades I used a simple 25W Antex iron; it will do most things. However, for small pitch components and when removing big components, you will benefit from different size tips. Consider something like
http://www.maplin.co.uk/p/maplin-50w-mains-solder-station-n78ar plus a range of tips. I do not consider them to be particularly reliable.
A very good set of videos is
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL926EC0F1F93C1837 They are old, made when videos were expensive => short and carefully made.
There is no such thing as a safe soldering station: one end is pointed and hot
Yep, you can get burns. Hover it is not easy to get burned by by ersa i-tool (pico). Exposed hot part is very short. Maybe I got one - two very small burns in the last 8 years I own I-CON 2 station, and I solder a lot. Much easier to get burns by hakko 888/936/clones. And even easier with unregulated soldering irons. Also, a very good idea would be to get some ESD or some sort of similar gloves for your kid, if you can find small enough size. They will protect hands from accidental burns quiet well.
I had a look at the more decent Chinese things like the Aoyue's,
Aoyue is not decent. It's a crap, and IMO, often worse than atten.
The pico is 117 euros on Amazon.de
And yes go for the silicon Antex if you can. I bought mine locally and did not even know there was an option back then. It might be worth moding it if you are stuck with it.
I would recommend a TS100 from Amazon or similar site. It requires a small power supply in addition but it can make a cool project for the child. You could even make it portable and they could take it with them because it runs on 24VDC and a simple battery could be made quite easily.
There is no such thing as a safe soldering station: one end is pointed and hot
Yep, you can get burns. Hover it is not easy to get burned by by ersa i-tool (pico). Exposed hot part is very short. Maybe I got one - two very small burns in the last 8 years I own I-CON 2 station, and I solder a lot. Much easier to get burns by hakko 888/936/clones. And even easier with unregulated soldering irons. Also, a very good idea would be to get some ESD or some sort of similar gloves for your kid, if you can find small enough size. They will protect hands from accidental burns quiet well.
Getting burned by a soldering iron is a right of passage
It is unlikely to be a serious burn, so I wouldn't worry
too much!
It is unlikely to be a serious burn, so I wouldn't worry too much!
It can be pretty bad. I think the worst was like 6-7 cm x 1 cm burn. IIRC I took hot unregulated firestick while thinking it was disconnected from mains. Pretty bad experience, after that I never take soldering irons by anything but handle.
It is unlikely to be a serious burn, so I wouldn't worry too much!
It can be pretty bad. I think the worst was like 6-7 cm x 1 cm burn. IIRC I took hot unregulated firestick while thinking it was disconnected from mains. Pretty bad experience, after that I never take soldering irons by anything but handle.
Oh, unpleasant, yes; I've had similar in the dim and distant past. But I think it is unlikely (not impossible) to be a deep burn.
Yes, warn kids (and adults) about it, just as you would about any other normal hazard in life. Presuming the kid is basically responsible, I don't see any reason to be worried about themselves on a soldering iron.