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Comments on Is there a particular type of lead-free solder that does not degrade soldering tips?

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Is there a particular type of lead-free solder that does not degrade soldering tips?

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I have had my soldering iron tips degrading at ridiculous rates. Granted, they are not very expensive, but sometimes it takes less than 8 hours of soldering for them to degrade to the point where they are no longer usable. I use a soft sponge for cleaning, don't leave the iron on for prolonged times and coat it with tin when not using it.

I see that the market is moving to lead-free solder (which is what I am using) and it is getting more difficult to acquire leaded solder. Yes, I have read that there are no real advantages of lead-free solder over leaded solder, except for reducing the waste that goes into the landmass.

However, assuming there are children and pets in the house, it would make sense to not have a spool of lead laying around. Naturally, it should be put away, but nobody is perfect, and you may forget etc.

Hence the question: Are there certain types of lead-free solder to look for, that are easy on the soldering iron tips? If so, are there particular chemical compounds that allow this?

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General comments (3 comments)
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A different type of solder, other than using lead-based solder, is probably not going to help. There are two causes to your problem:

  1. Crappy tips.
  2. Higher temperature required due to lead-free solder.

You can fix the first by getting a good soldering tool.

Leaded solder will help with the second. You cite several reasons not to use leaded solder. The disposal issue is valid (although quite minor), but the remaining ones are not, and the use of lead-free solder may actually make things worse:

children and pets in the house, it would make sense to not have a spool of lead laying around

There are far more dangerous substances in your house than leaded solder. Pretty much any cleaning chemical is worse, not to mention medicines. Simple touching, unlike with some cleaners, isn't going to cause problems. Teaching the kids to keep their hands off your electronics stuff, and putting away the solder when not in use should really be good enough.

The big point you are missing is that the main danger of solder to humans is the vaporized flux, not the metal itself. This is made more dangerous with lead-free solder due to the high temperatures. Kids standing near you watching you solder are exposed to significantly more harm due to inhaling flux fumes, than they would be by handling leaded solder.


In what manner the higher required temperature affect the service life of the tip …?

Chemical reactions and diffusions speed up with temperature. In this case, the metal of the tip slowly "dissolves" into the molten solder. Different metals vary in this. Copper is actually quite susceptible, which is one reason solder bonds with copper so well. Good quality soldering tips are copper on the inside (for good thermal conductivity), but coated with a metal that doesn't diffuse into molten solder as well. Higher temperatures speed up all these processes.

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General comments (2 comments)
General comments
coquelicot‭ wrote about 3 years ago

no 2. In what manner the higher required temperature affect the service life of the tip according to you?

Lundin‭ wrote about 3 years ago

@coquelicot‭ You need to go some 30-40 dgr C higher for RoHS solder. However, if you have the possibility to set the temperature manually, you put it much higher than the melting point anyway, which is the temperature that affects the tip life. Leaded melts around 180, RoHS around 220 and I put the iron at 350 dgr C. If you have a station with automatic temperature control, you don't need to worry of that. I had a small Metcal station which did this and the tips lasted forever.