On 01/02/2012 09:46 AM, Peter C. Wallace wrote:
A hair dryer is close but a little too cool. A hot air gun (the type used with
heat-shrink tubing) will work.
An inexpensive source for one of these is a paint remover heat gun. I
bought several at Lowes (Lumber/Building supplies) for $25 each.
On 01/03/2012 04:01 PM, Steve Blackmore wrote:
That's cuz you guys in the UK have an accent and talk funny... ;-)
Solder, and pronounced sodder.
Probably first heard of in the colonies from some village idiot with a
speech impediment who we gladly exported and became what
On 01/02/2012 03:15 PM, andy pugh wrote:
On 2 January 2012 19:59, Mike Paysonm...@dawgdayz.com wrote:
Skillet/hotplate soldering works great for those situations:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uov0SPHKcnk
How do you spell Solder in the US? All the videos seem to pronounce
it
On 01/03/2012 01:36 AM, Peter Blodow wrote:
Hello gentlemen,
the point is that the long o in solder is pronounced in US english
like aw in a common process known as delabilisation or unrounding.
This phenomenon is known in other languages, too, e.g. in Russian (eto
is pronounced like eta).
Peter Blodow wrote:
Hello gentlemen,
the point is that the long o in solder is pronounced in US english
like aw in a common process known as delabilisation or unrounding.
It is extremely rare to hear it pronounced sawder in the US, although
I have heard that
pronunciation once or twice.
On Tue, 03 Jan 2012 05:38:45 -0500, you wrote:
On 01/02/2012 03:15 PM, andy pugh wrote:
On 2 January 2012 19:59, Mike Paysonm...@dawgdayz.com wrote:
Skillet/hotplate soldering works great for those situations:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uov0SPHKcnk
How do you spell Solder in
Jon Elson schrieb:
Peter Blodow wrote:
Hello gentlemen,
the point is that the long o in solder is pronounced in US english
like aw in a common process known as delabilisation or unrounding.
It is extremely rare to hear it pronounced sawder in the US, although
I have heard
Steve Blackmore wrote:
On Tue, 03 Jan 2012 05:38:45 -0500, you wrote:
On 01/02/2012 03:15 PM, andy pugh wrote:
On 2 January 2012 19:59, Mike Paysonm...@dawgdayz.com wrote:
Skillet/hotplate soldering works great for those situations:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3NN7UGWYmBY
Good video, Goes over the basics of soldering SMD chips. They use flux a
lot to help clean and direct the solder where to go as many carry the
solder on the hot tip to the smd component and the built in rosin
usually boils away.
Gary K8IZ
On 1/2/2012
On Mon, 2 Jan 2012, andy pugh wrote:
Date: Mon, 2 Jan 2012 15:32:18 +
From: andy pugh bodge...@gmail.com
Reply-To: Enhanced Machine Controller (EMC)
emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net
To: Enhanced Machine Controller (EMC) emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: [Emc-users]
On 2 January 2012 15:46, Peter C. Wallace p...@mesanet.com wrote:
A hair dryer is close but a little too cool. A hot air gun (the type used with
heat-shrink tubing) will work.
OK, one has been on my to-buy list for a while, but so far the
hairdryer has worked.
You will also want some solder
On Mon, 2 Jan 2012, andy pugh wrote:
Date: Mon, 2 Jan 2012 16:01:43 +
From: andy pugh bodge...@gmail.com
Reply-To: Enhanced Machine Controller (EMC)
emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net
To: Enhanced Machine Controller (EMC) emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: Re: [Emc-users] Surface
On 2 January 2012 16:01, Peter C. Wallace p...@mesanet.com wrote:
To add to the fun, I have back-mounted optos too..
That does add to the fun... I hope they are not back to back.
Guess what…
One hopeful point is that I made the board pads oversize, so I might
even be able to use a soldering
On Mon, 2 Jan 2012, andy pugh wrote:
Date: Mon, 2 Jan 2012 16:13:28 +
From: andy pugh bodge...@gmail.com
Reply-To: Enhanced Machine Controller (EMC)
emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net
To: Enhanced Machine Controller (EMC) emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: Re: [Emc-users] Surface
On Monday, January 02, 2012 12:23:13 PM andy pugh did opine:
I have some surface-mount opto-sensors which have pads on the
underside, but no pins as such.
Can anyone suggest how to solder them to PCB pads? I currently have a
soldering iron, blowtorch, gas cooker and a hairdryer, though I am
On Mon, 2 Jan 2012, andy pugh wrote:
Date: Mon, 2 Jan 2012 16:13:28 +
From: andy pugh bodge...@gmail.com
Reply-To: Enhanced Machine Controller (EMC)
emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net
To: Enhanced Machine Controller (EMC) emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: Re: [Emc-users] Surface
andy pugh wrote:
I have some surface-mount opto-sensors which have pads on the
underside, but no pins as such.
Can anyone suggest how to solder them to PCB pads? I currently have a
soldering iron, blowtorch, gas cooker and a hairdryer, though I am not
averse to buying other tools.
Hmmm,
gene heskett wrote:
Ed Nisely had
an article in CC some time back where he used a toaster oven for that,
IIRC.
I also do production work with a toaster oven! I have a ramp and soak
temperature
controller from Omega, and found the best control was to poke the
thermocouple
into a plated
On Mon, Jan 2, 2012 at 11:19 AM, Jon Elson el...@pico-systems.com wrote:
If the pads are completely covered by the part, you have a real dilemma!
About the only way to solder these are IR reflow or hot air. A hair dryer
doesn't get hot enough, a heat gun is probably too much for sensitive
On 2 January 2012 19:59, Mike Payson m...@dawgdayz.com wrote:
Skillet/hotplate soldering works great for those situations:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uov0SPHKcnk
How do you spell Solder in the US? All the videos seem to pronounce
it sodder whereas I have only ever heard it pronounced
Subject: Re: [Emc-users] Surface-Mount
On 2 January 2012 19:59, Mike Payson m...@dawgdayz.com wrote:
Skillet/hotplate soldering works great for those situations:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uov0SPHKcnk
How do you spell Solder in the US? All the videos seem to pronounce
it sodder whereas I
It is spelled Solder, but pronounced as if the L was silent, sodder.
On Mon, Jan 2, 2012 at 12:15 PM, andy pugh bodge...@gmail.com wrote:
On 2 January 2012 19:59, Mike Payson m...@dawgdayz.com wrote:
Skillet/hotplate soldering works great for those situations:
On Monday, January 02, 2012 04:02:42 PM andy pugh did opine:
On 2 January 2012 19:59, Mike Payson m...@dawgdayz.com wrote:
Skillet/hotplate soldering works great for those situations:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uov0SPHKcnk
How do you spell Solder in the US? All the videos seem to
We spell it solder but say it sawder.
Reason is unknown to me.
--
Write once. Port to many.
Get the SDK and tools to simplify cross-platform app development. Create
new or port existing apps to sell to consumers
andy pugh wrote:
On 2 January 2012 19:59, Mike Payson m...@dawgdayz.com wrote:
Skillet/hotplate soldering works great for those situations:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uov0SPHKcnk
How do you spell Solder in the US? All the videos seem to pronounce
it sodder whereas I have only
Hello gentlemen,
the point is that the long o in solder is pronounced in US english
like aw in a common process known as delabilisation or unrounding.
This phenomenon is known in other languages, too, e.g. in Russian (eto
is pronounced like eta). The same is true with lot or bother. As a
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