I recently came to the realization that I’ve been kinda punishing myself with cheap no-name solder that is really difficult to work with.

I reluctantly bought this (rather expensive) lead free solder for around $25 and the difference really took me by surprise - it melts and flows so easily!

Kinda got me wondering what everyone else has been using for solder, or what’s worked well for you so far at least?

Ages ago (80’s I think) there was talk of making lead free solder the only type that was available to consumers, and my great uncle (a deal horder) went out and got 2 cases of radioshack 64/40 resin core. Pretty sure it’s the same stuff you can still buy today, but I’ve got another 4 spools in my kit (that are old enough to drink).

In my uncles defense sometimes his deal hording paid off. He once saved a family reunion when our venue fell through because he happened to have a dozen brand new hibachi grills in the apartment he rented just for his stuff. And he made a small fortune when he bought a bunch of freon before it went off the market.

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10 points

Kester 63/37 no-clean 22AWG for leaded work, SN100C no-clean for RoHS. Mg chemicals and chip quik are good alternatives, Kester can be expensive to justify for home use.

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9 points

I use cheap trash solder, and dislike soldering, very possibly because of it

I’ll look into upgrading my solder, thanks 👍

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6 points

I got some cheap solder with my solder station and it was the bane of my existence. Found some leaded solder I think I got from radio shack years ago and it works so well. I hate to say it but I haven’t yet had good success with unleaded solder. Someone please save me from the brain damage.

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3 points

That’s just healthy, you’ll build up a resistance to lead poisoning

“What doesn’t immediately kill you always makes you stronger”

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6 points

“What doesn’t immediately kill you always makes you stronger”

Cancer?

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9 points

I have 60/40 leaded solder that worked pretty well. I’m definetly going to invest into some good lead free solder

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4 points

I’m all about the leaded solder – but I also use it very infrequently and don’t worry about the motility of my swimmers ;)

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10 points

I think it’s the your synapses you need to worry about, but I forget, I love my 60/40 too. Still have a couple big rolls from RadioShack.

Really though if you wash hands after handling it, and use it in such small hobby scale quantities as most, it won’t matter. The smoke from the burning rosin is probably more dangerous.

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7 points

Leaded baby

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2 points

With no ventilation! Mmm, smells like dying brain cells.

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5 points

The smoke is from the rosin core and flux. Lead free is equally bad for the lungs.

I wouldn’t eat after touching Lead though.

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