Your soldering station is exactly the same as the Tenma unit here
(http://www.mcmelectronics.com/product/21-7945), just with a different brand
name. In fact, I've seen these same units being sold by a number of vendors.
MCM has extra tips and sponges for the unit. The tip shank diameter is 0.187",
same as yours. Tips are sold individually.
I bought one of these stations a few months ago when they were on sale at around
$13 USD. It's a bit slow to heat up, but seems to do the job adequately, even
on connections to a large ground place and connections to metal chassis.
--
Dave M
MasonDG44 at comcast dot net (Just substitute the appropriate characters in the
address)
Experience: What you get when you don't get what you want
This is a ZhongDi ZD-99 http://china-zhongdi.com/zd-99.htm. The
original manufacturer is NINGBO ZHONGDI MANUFACTURE CO.,LTD. Jishigang
Industry Development Area, Ningbo China.
Googleing for "ZD-99 soldering" brings up several places selling the
station and replacement tips.
> "JR North" <junkjas...@bigfoot.com> wrote in message
> news:ubjb54lsp0dm7sd9n...@4ax.com...
>>I bought one of these on Ebay:
>> http://cgi.ebay.com/NEW-soldering-STATION-SOLDER-IRON-50W-Extra-tip_W0
>> QQitemZ290238359950QQihZ019QQcategoryZ109556QQssPageNameZWDVWQQrdZ1QQc
>> mdZViewItem it works well.
>> The box says Sydney Electronic Tools and also shows 3 sets of
>> replacement tips 5-7 each in various sizes and configs on the box
>> These are .187" shank ferrule mounted tips.No instructions or company
>> info in the box. (don't need any Ebay finger-wagging). The seller is
>> no help. Can't find the company on Google(prolly Chinese)-just get
>> loads of Sydney, Australia links and 'tips on soldering' . Other
>> links for known brands like Weller don't offer a'kit' of tips, just
>> ploddingly large lists of individual tips, and don't list the shank
>> dia alot of the time.
>> Anyone have anything helpful? thanks
>> JR
>> HOME PAGE:
>> http://www.seanet.com/~jasonrnorth
>> --------------------------------------------------
>
>
> Your soldering station is exactly the same as the Tenma unit here
> (http://www.mcmelectronics.com/product/21-7945), just with a different
> brand name. In fact, I've seen these same units being sold by a
> number of vendors. MCM has extra tips and sponges for the unit. The
> tip shank diameter is 0.187", same as yours. Tips are sold
> individually. I bought one of these stations a few months ago when
> they were on sale at around $13 USD. It's a bit slow to heat up, but
> seems to do the job adequately, even on connections to a large ground
> place and connections to metal chassis.
>
I think that's a Weller product;WLC100
http://www.cooperhandtools.com/brands/CF_Files/model_detail.cfm?upc=0371030
59963
http://www.cooperhandtools.com/onlinecatalog/images/WLC100_100.jpg
--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
kua.net
WRONG, INCORRECT.
I will post correct information shortly.
g. beat
JR -
First, my qualifications. I have been working in electronics since the
ealry 1970s and repairing soldering stations since 1975. I have seen many
changes in the industry in the past 30+ years.
There are a large number of poorly made "copy-cat" soldering stations on the
market.
The soldering tip selection is poor (less than 6 tips usually and no SMT
selections) and virtually no availability for repalcement heaters, parts,
etc. A throw away station.
I consider this unit you have mentioned to be one of these types.
I try to advise people to quit wasting their money on these units, when high
quality used units (Weller, Haako, OKI/Metcal, Pace) are available weekly on
eBay and various surplus venues ---- and tips are readily available from
qualtiy distributors and dealers.
One poster said this was a Weller WCC100, he was incorrect.
This is a model manufactured in China and Mexico, from molds or designs
possibly stolen from Weller's WCC10 and WLC100 production several years ago.
A number of Chinese / Taiwan mfg. also clone/copy the popular Hakko 936
station.
SORNY ROONG INDUSTRIAL (Solomon) is one of the largest OEM suppliers in the
world.
Tenma/MCM, circuit Specialists, etc. are many of the "brand name" companies
that carry Solomon products (as OEM supplier)
http://soldering.com.tw/p1_all.html
NOW, for your Questions.
For generic tips for a variety of soldering stations, look at the PLATO
brand.
I rarely use Plato tips, BUT for situations like yours -- they are an
option.
http://www.platoproducts.com/crosspa2.htm
At .187 inches in diameter (3/16") this is the same shank diameter used by
the Pace PS-80/PS-90 soldering irons.
As for a "kit of tips" -- that is a RARE offfering these days. Pace use to
offer a kit of SMT tips, at $55, but discontinued it -- since most users
only desired one or two tips in the kit.
FREE ADVICE: Use chisel/screwdriver profile tips.
Start with these 3 sizes: 1/16", 3/32" and 1/8" size profiles.
That wll meet 95% of the needs for a home user or hobbyist.
Select the correct tip size for the item you are soldering -- MATCH the MASS
of the tip to the MASS of the sodleirng area.
Go to these web sites (US west coast) for quality soldering stations, irons,
supplies, parts and accessories:
Wassco (So. California)
http://www.wassco.com/
Action Electronics (Santa Ana, California)
http://www.action-electronics.com/
IF you need additional references (other parts of US) or resources, please
post quesiton or query.
g. beat
w9gb
> MATCH the MASS
> of the tip to the MASS of the soldering area.
Thanks for that information. That sounds like a great hint!
--
bz 73 de N5BZ k
please pardon my infinite ignorance, the set-of-things-I-do-not-know is an
infinite set.
bz+...@ch100-5.chem.lsu.edu remove ch100-5 to avoid spam trap
Common error for newcomers to Soldering.
Based on sound physical principles of thermal conduction of heat (Fourier's
law)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_conductivity
Greg
w9gb
True, but even though I was aware of the physical principles, I had not
seen that particular 'rule of thumb' before.
I might modify it slightly. "the mass of the tip should match of exceed the
mass of the objects to be soldered".
Of course, a temperature controlled iron with plenty of power and thermal
conductivity will do as well but the image of matching the masses is a
great image to keep in mind.
--
bz 73 de N5BZ k
please pardon my infinite ignorance, the set-of-things-I-do-not-know is an