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Basic Solder Question

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Posted by marxalot on Wednesday, January 31, 2007 11:52 AM

A toothbrush dipped in denatured alcohol will take the rosin flux off.

Jim

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Posted by laz 57 on Wednesday, January 31, 2007 11:15 AM

I always clean my wires or track with a little very fine grit sand paper before soldering.

laz57

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Posted by lionelsoni on Wednesday, January 31, 2007 11:15 AM
What you got should be fine.  You don't need to clean off rosin flux, whether you added it separately or it was in the solder.  It's just as well, since rosin is not that easy to clean off.

Bob Nelson

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Posted by Jumijo on Wednesday, January 31, 2007 11:01 AM

 lionelsoni wrote:
If you have rosin-core solder, you probably don't need any additional flux.

I bought Radio Shack rosin core solder with flux added. Did I buy the wrong stuff for soldering loco and tender wires? If not, do I still have to wash the flux off a finished joint? 

Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale

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Posted by marxalot on Wednesday, January 31, 2007 10:52 AM

There is nothing wrong with using flux as long as it is the rosin style and not acid. I took apart a 20 year old control panel that was all soldered using rosin flux and there was no deterioration. If flux was so bad they would not have so many types. Take a look at:

http://www.geocities.com/etforeplay/solder.html

http://www.action-electronics.com/kester.htm

Just don't use the acid style.

Jim

 

 

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Posted by daan on Wednesday, January 31, 2007 10:36 AM

I would recommend resincore solder, because flux is an acid and remains will corrode your track after soldering. You can wipe it off, but there will always be some remains. If you use flux be sure you can rinse the piece in water after soldering. (otherwise the remains will look like battery damage after a while)

For connecting wires to track or solderwork in your locomotive always use resincore solder and no flux. The best way to solder is to melt a bit of solder on the tip of your solderiron to guide the heat better, heat up the thing you want to solder and then melt the resincore wire on the hot surface. If you put the solder on the iron and then onto your workpiece, the resin is already vapourated and will not help to solder the wire.

Flux is used if you use a torch to solder, when plumbing or building models out of metal which will be thoroughly cleaned or sandblasted afterwards.

Daan. I'm Dutch, but only by country...
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Posted by lionelsoni on Wednesday, January 31, 2007 9:32 AM
If you have rosin-core solder, you probably don't need any additional flux.

Bob Nelson

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Posted by A&Y Ry on Wednesday, January 31, 2007 5:28 AM

dochoot

Just be sure you are using rosin flux [for electrical]rather than acid flux[for plumbing]. I may be wrong because of what I am used to, but Oatey sounds a lot like a brand of plumbing flux.

Anyway, tinning is the right soldering procedure---clean and tin a pudddle on the flange on the rail and tin the wire end, hold the wire on the tinned flange reheat and meld them together.

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Basic Solder Question
Posted by dochooter on Tuesday, January 30, 2007 11:09 PM

I am getting ready to solder wire to my track.  I have some Oatey No. 95 lead free tinning flux.  Should I use it?  Will this hurt electrical conduction?

 

Thanks

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