Capacitor leads vs. resistor leads

comradehoser

Well-known member
WHY are my crap solders always invariably and without fail on capacitors???

Particularly electrolytics. Resistors great, diodes great, LEDs awesome, sockets great, capacitors I end up with blobs or half soldered Quasimodo atrocities.

Is there something in the manufacturing? Am I the only one?
 
Hmmm. The heatsink: maybe.

Running @ 375 C with Kester 60-40. Flows and all, just doesn't seem to want to settle unless I blob it.

I'm not saying I always make bad cap solders, but when I do make a bad solder, more often than not, it's a cap

Don't have that issue with switches or pots.
 
Nah, my iron is decent and I keep the tip clean.

Cruddy shit's not my game if you know what I mean.

Shipped with the best solder wire I ever had,

Even if it's not brand name, you know I can't be mad.

Xtronic.

[Edit: this one, I love it.

1730291773890.jpeg


Mine didn't come with tweezers or a solder sucker, and the first one I got from Amazon glowed red, but this one has been super solid. No complaints, and their solder blows Kester out of the water for me.
 
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Age of cap was my first thought, oxidation on the leads... take some emory cloth to the leads.

Also, get a bicycle-rim eraser for cleaning off the oxidation of older vero, perf and PCBs... ("WTF is FF talking about?" A: link to a talkbass post):

1249382903094-1jg8m32w4nqee-b5facdd-jpg.4187191


I had the same problem, thought it might be my soldering-technique (lack thereof) or old solder or... NOPE! Just needed clean soldering-surfaces!
 
Hahaha you gave me a momentary cognitive missed step [like when you go down a set of stairs in the dark and think you the last one but it's still one more], as I've spent a long time doing bikes as well. [I was like, yep, rims and canti brakes WAIT A MINUTE that's not this forum!!].
 
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You could try 63/37 solder. It clumps less than 60/40 in my experience.

Also, with electros, I usually place them with the full lead (not trimmed). After you solder both leads, you can go back and hit each joint with the iron and run it up the lead quickly. This wicks away most of the excess solder and when you clip the lead it looks normal.
 
Always. After I test but before I install. It doesn't always make a difference but it does enough to make me want to keep doing it. It also stopped the random hard to solder components from happening to me.
That's awesome. I don't think I'm going to start doing it, but I respect that level of attention to quality.
 
You could try 63/37 solder. It clumps less than 60/40 in my experience.

Also, with electros, I usually place them with the full lead (not trimmed). After you solder both leads, you can go back and hit each joint with the iron and run it up the lead quickly. This wicks away most of the excess solder and when you clip the lead it looks normal.
Yep, i do this, and I do use 63/37 I believe, I can never remember the exact ratio, though, so I just say 60/40.
 
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