I recently bought a re-branded Zhongdi ZD-8936 from a big re-seller here in Sweden.
Haven't seen any reviews on this soldering station, so it was somewhat a "buy a pig in a poke" situation.
But when I powered it up, I noticed that even though it reached/stated 300 degrees (C) in ~10 seconds, it didn't melt the 60/40 solder (even close to base), until another ~20 seconds later.
So I disassembled the soldering iron (which looks quite like all those hakko 907's clones out there) and noticed the tip had a really loose fit.
Anyhow, I grabbed a copper wire from a FK installation cable (7 x 0.52mm) and turned around a base of similar size (screwdriver) as the heating element for about 20mm.
Then I sanded down the outer surface so that it was flat and the tip made a nice good fit (but still didn't get stuck), and then sleeved it over the heating element.
With this change, when the station reaches about 200 degrees the temperature starts to increase somewhat slower, but the solder was melt after just 16 seconds (almost half the time).
I haven't been able to measure the recovery-time though, but in theory it should be better. Perhaps I should waste a tip and dip it in water and see when it melts solder again (or is there a better method)?
Btw, I've left a bit of the top heating element free/unsleeved since it seems that the thermocouple is placed there and I rather want it to make direct contact with the tip itself.
BUT... Can I somehow damage or reduce the life of the tip/heating element/station by using this "copper sleeve" on my heating element, or is it just plain stupid for any other reason

?
EDIT: Altered title