Soldering Explained: Simple Steps To Reliable Metal Joints

Soldering joins metals with a filler that melts at a lower temperature than the parts you bond. From printed-circuit boards to copper pipes and jewelry, this age-old process delivers electrical contact, fluid seals, and structural support with basic tools. The guide below strips away jargon, explains best practices, and lists real shop parameters so you can solder clean joints on the first try.

Indholdsfortegnelse


Why Understanding Soldering Matters

Good solder joints hold circuits alive, stop roof leaks, and secure sensor wires in harsh engines. Poor joints crack, corrode, or overheat. By learning basic metallurgy and process control, you cut rejects and save time.

Core Theory Of Soldering

Solder flows by wetting. Heat raises the filler above its liquidus, flux removes oxides, and surface tension draws metal into gaps as narrow as 0.05 mm. Because base metals stay below their melting point, parts keep shape and temper.

Melting Range Chart For Popular Alloys

Tin-Lead 60/40          183–191 °C ███████████
Tin-Silver-Copper (SAC305) 217 °C ████████████
Tin-Bismuth 42/58       138 °C ██████
Tin-Copper 99/1         227 °C █████████████

Lower bars mean lower soldering temperature and less thermal stress on parts.

Choose The Right Solder Alloy

The table summarizes key alloys and where they fit best.

LegeringMelting °CLead-Free?Main AdvantageTypical Use
Sn60 / Pb40183–191NejWide pasty range, easy hand workVintage electronics repair
SAC305 (Sn96.5 Ag3 Cu0.5)217JaStrong joint, RoHS compliantSMT boards
Sn42 Bi58138JaLow heat, good for sensorsHeat-sensitive components
Sn97 Cu3227JaLave omkostningerPlumbing fittings
Sn96.5 Ag3.5221JaSuperior fatigue lifeAerospace circuits

Match Flux To The Job

Flux cleans and protects surfaces. Pick one that activates at your solder temperature and suits downstream washing.

Flux typeActivation temp °CResidue cleaningBest on
Rosin RMA160Optional (isopropyl)Electronics hand joints
No-clean180IngenHigh-volume SMT
Water-soluble organic120Hot DI waterHigh-reliability boards
Inorganic acid (HZnCl)110Hot wash + neutralizePlumbing copper pipe

Set Tools And Temperatures

Tool choice affects joint quality more than alloy costs. Use the table for a quick match.

ToolPower ratingTip temp setpointIdeal joint type
Soldering iron (analog)25–40 W370 °CThrough-hole leads
Temperature-controlled station60–90 W320–350 °CFine-pitch SMT
Hot-air rework gun400 W280–360 °C airBGA reflow
Propane torchNAFlame ~600 °CBrass fittings, roof flashing

Step-By-Step Hand Soldering

  1. Prep. Cut leads, deburr edges, and wipe with alcohol.
  2. Tin tip. Melt a small solder bead to wet the iron face.
  3. Heat joint. Press the tip to both parts for 2–3 s.
  4. Add solder. Feed wire to the joint, not the iron, until a smooth fillet forms.
  5. Remove heat. Hold still until shiny. A dull finish hints at cold solder.
  6. Inspect. Use 3× magnifier; look for cone shape, full wetting, no voids.

Joint Dimension Targets For Through-Hole Pins

Pin Ø 0.8 mm → Fillet height 0.4–0.6 mm
Pin Ø 1.0 mm → Fillet height 0.6–0.8 mm
Pin Ø 1.3 mm → Fillet height 0.8–1.0 mm

Wave And Reflow Basics For Production

In high-volume boards, solder paste is printed, parts placed, and the assembly rides a conveyor through a reflow oven. Each zone matters.

ZoneTemp °CTime sFormål
Pre-heat120–15060–90Remove solvents
Soak150–18060–120Activate flux
Reflow peakSAC305: 24030–45 above liquidusWet all pads
Cool<3 °C/s ramp-Freeze grain-fine joint

Inspect Joints For Quality

Check visual cues first, then sample destructive pulls or X-ray for hidden voids.

  • Shiny, concave fillet indicates good wetting.
  • Fillet angle between 40° and 70° gives strongest shear.
  • Solder thickness should be 0.5–0.8 × lead diameter.

Common Defects And Fixes

The table pairs each defect with a quick remedy.

DefectVisual clueMain causeFix
Cold jointDull, grainy surfaceLow temp or short heatRaise tip 20 °C
Solder bridgeTin between padsToo much pasteReduce stencil aperture
VoidBGA X-ray shadowTrapped flux gasesSlow soak ramp
Black padDark copper finishSulfur tarnish + heatUse ENIG boards

Soldering Safety And Fumes

  • Ventilate with fan and carbon filter; flux fumes irritate lungs.
  • Wear eye protection—molten solder can spatter.
  • Avoid bare skin contact: Tin–lead alloy is toxic if ingested.
  • Keep tip cleaners wet with rosin, not water, to stop thermal shock.

Cost Comparison Of Methods

Evaluate per-joint cost for prototypes versus mass runs.

MetodeCap-ex USDJoints/hourLabor cost/joint
Hand iron150150$0.12
Hot-air rework90080$0.28
Batch wave35 00015 000$0.005
Inline reflow70 00025 000$0.003

Need Precision Fabrication?

Beyond solder work, our shop provides CNC machining, sheet-metal, and injection solutions under one roof. Send your drawings for a single-source quote.

Quick Recap And Next Steps

  1. Pick a RoHS-compliant alloy unless legacy repair demands Sn-Pb.
  2. Match flux and temperature to metals and cleanliness goals.
  3. Control heating profile—wet surfaces, avoid overshoot.
  4. Inspect joints visually and by pull or X-ray if critical.
  5. Store solder wire dry, sealed, and reel off slowly to stop oxide build-up.

Master these points and your solder joints will shine—electrically, mechanically, and under audit.

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Lee
Lee

I love to learn and share knowledge about CNC machining and various processing materials. I am very happy to pass on knowledge with everyone!

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