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desolder braid or suction pump

R

rebel

Jan 1, 1970
0
which is better for desoldering IC's ?

depends on a lot of factors. Are these plated PTH or SMD IC's? Are you trying
to recover the IC's and scrap the board, or vice versa?

Rule#1: If you don't want to save the (leaded) chip, cut the legs first and
remove them one-by-one. If SMD, I'd still be trying to minimise board damage by
cutting leads if at all possible.

My Rule#2: Desolder braid is largely ineffective on PTH unless the hole is
laaaarge. I would (do) use a desoldering sucker.

Just my 2c worth.
 
D

Dave

Jan 1, 1970
0
rebel said:
depends on a lot of factors. Are these plated PTH or SMD IC's? Are you trying
to recover the IC's and scrap the board, or vice versa?

Rule#1: If you don't want to save the (leaded) chip, cut the legs first and
remove them one-by-one. If SMD, I'd still be trying to minimise board damage by
cutting leads if at all possible.

My Rule#2: Desolder braid is largely ineffective on PTH unless the hole is
laaaarge. I would (do) use a desoldering sucker.

Just my 2c worth.

I have a board. I have 2 suspect chips. I have spares

They are normal IC's

it is an old vic 20

I want to remove and maybe re-use if ok.

If I put sockets on the board, can I put the ex soldered chip in the socket
? I mean, can I clean the legs enough to do this ?

thanks
 
A

Arfa Daily

Jan 1, 1970
0
Dave said:
I have a board. I have 2 suspect chips. I have spares

They are normal IC's

it is an old vic 20

I want to remove and maybe re-use if ok.

If I put sockets on the board, can I put the ex soldered chip in the
socket
? I mean, can I clean the legs enough to do this ?

thanks
The legs of the ICs are usually tinned from the factory anyway, so the basic
answer is yes. When you've got as much solder off as you can, finish off by
scraping with a blunt curved scalpel blade. Use good quality turned pin
sockets rather than leaf contact types.

As others have said, a lot depends on the type of board as to whether a
desolder pump or braid is better. If using braid, it is essential to use
good quality, that is not old. And before the usual suspects start saying
you can roll your own, yes you can, but it's a lot more convenient to just
buy new. Whichever method you use, you should first flood the original
joints with new solder, and let each one bubble a couple of seconds.

You will struggle with either a hand desolder pump or braid, when you get to
any pins connected to the power and ground planes. My advice would be to try
both removal methods first, but once only. If you struggle to release any
pins, I would not pursue it further, as board damage is sure to result. In
that case, just cut the IC pins and remove them one at a time. There is a
board that I work on regularly that has some ordinary DIL ICs which fail. I
have a proper professional desoldering station that I use on them, and even
that struggles sometimes. If it doesn't get the IC out first time, I just
cut it out. Takes more time, but guarantees that the board will stay OK.

Arfa
 
Mostly the sucker beats the braid by a long way. But there are a few
folk that prefer braid.

I have a board. I have 2 suspect chips. I have spares

They are normal IC's

it is an old vic 20

In that case its likely a multilayer board. Trouble with those is that
sucking the solder out makes it impossible to melt what little's left.
You may be better off not removing the solder at all, but melting and
removing each pin, after cutting it from the IC. Then just use the
sucker to clear the holes.
I want to remove and maybe re-use if ok.

If I put sockets on the board, can I put the ex soldered chip in the socket
? I mean, can I clean the legs enough to do this ?

Yes, but... you'll not get a flat smooth surface, so it may be
difficult to get it into the socket, and very difficult to get it out
again, but yes its poss, if you dont cook the IC or cut its legs off.
With multilayer boards theres a good probability you'll end up doing
one or both of those.


NT
 
M

Meat Plow

Jan 1, 1970
0
which is better for desoldering IC's ?

Used braid for many years but it depends on your skill factor.
--
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#1 Bartlo Pset, March 13-24 2007
#10 Most hated Usenetizen of all time
Pierre Salinger Memorial Hook, Line & Sinker, June 2004
COOSN-266-06-25794
 
J

James Sweet

Jan 1, 1970
0
Dave said:
which is better for desoldering IC's ?

It depends. I have both on hand, usually I try the bulb first, it's
attached to a desoldering iron, very useful tool so long as you keep a
new tip on it. I haven't had much luck with the standalone bulbs.
 
J

James Sweet

Jan 1, 1970
0
Arfa said:
The legs of the ICs are usually tinned from the factory anyway, so the basic
answer is yes. When you've got as much solder off as you can, finish off by
scraping with a blunt curved scalpel blade. Use good quality turned pin
sockets rather than leaf contact types.

As others have said, a lot depends on the type of board as to whether a
desolder pump or braid is better. If using braid, it is essential to use
good quality, that is not old. And before the usual suspects start saying
you can roll your own, yes you can, but it's a lot more convenient to just
buy new. Whichever method you use, you should first flood the original
joints with new solder, and let each one bubble a couple of seconds.

If the braid is old, dip it in liquid flux. Makes a huge difference.
 
M

Michael Black

Jan 1, 1970
0
James said:
It depends. I have both on hand, usually I try the bulb first, it's
attached to a desoldering iron, very useful tool so long as you keep a
new tip on it. I haven't had much luck with the standalone bulbs.

I've had a solder sucker for twent years, and found that does work
the best. On the other hand, at some point I did buy some desoldering
braid, and when that runs out I would get some more to have around.

I also bought a cheap desoldering iron, from Radio Shack, in the late
eighties. It has the advantage that it's easier to use than an iron
and a solder sucker. It was about ten dollars at the time, so I
felt it was worth having around. But, the tip wasn't plated, so
it didn't take long before it corroded and the unit wasn't particularly
useful. The tip was removeable, but they didn't carry replacement
sat the time. They later did, but I'd gotten out of the habit. I think
except for the tip issue, the desoldering iron seemed the best choice.

But again, some braid and a sucker are not really expensive, so one
might want to keep both around.

Michael
 
M

Michael A. Terrell

Jan 1, 1970
0
James said:
If the braid is old, dip it in liquid flux. Makes a huge difference.


Make sure it is ROSIN flux. Mild RMA is even better.


--
Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to
prove it.
Member of DAV #85.

Michael A. Terrell
Central Florida
 
D

Dr. Anton T. Squeegee

Jan 1, 1970
0
which is better for desoldering IC's ?

Thru-hole or surface mount?

Are you trying to salvage chips for later re-use, or repair
something?

For thru-hole, I prefer a good power desoldering unit. I'm using
the Pace ST-115 at both home and work. Excellent unit.

For surface-mount, there are a number of rework stations available,
none of which are particularly cheap. At the low end, you have the
convection-heating (hot air) units, such as Hakko and Madell. At the
higher end, you're still doing convection, but the units are better
built (A.P.E., Pace, etc.)

At the top of the line for surface mount are the infrared rework
stations. I've never seen one sell for less than in the high four-figure
area, and new ones have price tags that rival luxury cars or small
homes.

Now, with all that said: I do also use desolder braid. However, its
main use with me is cleaning off surface-mount pads, or component holes,
prior to replacing said component.

Happy hunting.
 
D

Dave

Jan 1, 1970
0
Dr. Anton T. Squeegee said:
Thru-hole or surface mount?

Are you trying to salvage chips for later re-use, or repair
something?

For thru-hole, I prefer a good power desoldering unit. I'm using
the Pace ST-115 at both home and work. Excellent unit.

For surface-mount, there are a number of rework stations available,
none of which are particularly cheap. At the low end, you have the
convection-heating (hot air) units, such as Hakko and Madell. At the
higher end, you're still doing convection, but the units are better
built (A.P.E., Pace, etc.)

At the top of the line for surface mount are the infrared rework
stations. I've never seen one sell for less than in the high four-figure
area, and new ones have price tags that rival luxury cars or small
homes.

Now, with all that said: I do also use desolder braid. However, its
main use with me is cleaning off surface-mount pads, or component holes,
prior to replacing said component.

Happy hunting.


--
Dr. Anton T. Squeegee, Director, Dutch Surrealist Plumbing Institute
(Known to some as Bruce Lane, KC7GR)
http://www.bluefeathertech.com -- kyrrin a/t bluefeathertech d-o=t calm
"Salvadore Dali's computer has surreal ports..."

thankyou for all your help.

i dont want to spend much, so I shall struggle on....
 
B

bz

Jan 1, 1970
0
which is better for desoldering IC's ?

Be sure and get some 63/37 solder. It is eutectic solder (the solder melts
and freezes at a single temperature, the lowest possible for the elements
involved.

Many use 60/40 or even 50/50 solder. These both pass through a 'plastic'
stage when melting and when freezing. Any disturbance of the joint during
the plastic stage results in a 'cold solder joint'. Crystals of the higher
melting element form.

Note, now many countries require 'no lead' or 'low lead' solders. These
tend to melt at much higher temperatures. For each pair (or trio) of
elements, there is a ratio that gives a eutectic mixture.

In any case, when desoldering, adding some 63/37 solder to the joint. It
will help you 'disolve' the original, higher melting solder, and remove it.

There are some controlled temperature irons combined with a vacuum pump
into a desoldering station. They are not cheap but are a good investment if
you are doing a lot of board repair.

There are conductive ink 'pens' to allow repair of circuit board traces.

For a more professional look, there are stick on solder pads and traces.
Some of the board repair kits even include fiberglass making materials to
repair the board itself and solder resist to repair the solder mask, along
with dyes to color these so that the board looks 'as good as new' when you
finish with it.

Google for 'eutectic solder', 'desoldering station' and for 'pcb repair
kit'


--
bz 73 de N5BZ k

please pardon my infinite ignorance, the set-of-things-I-do-not-know is an
infinite set.

[email protected] remove ch100-5 to avoid spam trap
 
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