Cold Heat Soldering Tool

mixos1

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Jul 13, 2003
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Heats fast, cools fast
The Cold Heat Soldering Tool is a cordless tool that heats quickly and cools down nearly as fast. It creates the heat right in the proprietary tip material, making the tool 20 times more efficient than the average conventional soldering iron. The tip reaches 500 F in less than 1 second for many types of joints and cools to the touch in 1-5 seconds so you can put it away

 
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surajbarkale

Aug 5, 2004
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This is a good tool to show off to friends but i don't think i can use it. Man if i can't feel the heat coming off my solder gun i might doze on the veroboard itself :D

 

MP1

Dec 7, 2003
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I have been trying out this device to see what comments I could add about it. I only have the larger tip, so I cannot get into the tight spots with mine, but it looks like the tip touching the solder or copper completes a connection and causes the tip to get hot like a little welder. Then when you remove it, the connection is lost and it immediately shuts down and cools off. With a little practice, I think I could do pretty good on larger circuits. My only concerns are that I see a little spark when the tip is making connection. I am not so sure you would be able to use such a tool with static sensitive devices. Suraj, perhaps the spark will help keep you awake ;D

MP

 

surajbarkale

Aug 5, 2004
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Now that you are mentioning the sparks, i have a story to tell ;). Some years ago in a magazine named Electronics For You (in India) i read an article. It was about making a solder gun from a normal wooden pencil. The recipe was like this. You will need a 12V/1A DC power supply (filtering is not required). Take a wooden pencil attach one terminal of the power supply to one end of the pencil (to the lead inside it). And attach other terminal of power supply to the solder metal. Now trim the other end of the pencil to suit your needs. When you connect that end to the solder metal, it melts. I tried it out it was working fine until i accidently burned one BC547 by touchin base wth one lead & collector with another ;D . I stopped using it at last when i fried some more parts ;D So if it sparks take care

 

dicky

Oct 20, 2004
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Yeh!..I like my Weller too..One thing to know though..Some brands of resin core solder are not 60/40..they are 50/50 in make-up [tin/lead]... this leads to more heat required and sometimes ruined PCBs [ watch the cost of tin on the stock market ]...Dicky

 

Jshwaa

Mar 6, 2005
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Anyone got a hunch on how it works? I'm guessing it uses some sort of ultra-sonic magnetic field which creates a vibration in the solder which induces friction and heat. Kind of like a pin-pointed microwave.

 

MP1

Dec 7, 2003
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Here is my hunch:
It is more like a short circuit. There is a split in the tip and when you have a connection by the copper across the split, I think you are completing this connection which causes a short and thus gives you a high current. There is a spark like when you have a short.
I have only used mine a few times to see how it functions, but I imagine that the AAA batteries will not have a very long life if you use it a lot.

MP

 

Codyhtml

Oct 29, 2004
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Here is my hunch:
It is more like a short circuit. There is a split in the tip and when you have a connection by the copper across the split, I think you are completing this connection which causes a short and thus gives you a high current. There is a spark like when you have a short.
I have only used mine a few times to see how it functions, but I imagine that the AAA batteries will not have a very long life if you use it a lot.

MP
yep thats how it works not a pinpointed microwave short circuit
 

mrohler

Jun 19, 2005
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yeah it puts out a small voltage/current because when you solder led's with it and touch both leads it will light up.

 

audioguru2

Apr 6, 2004
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It is not a welder, the tip is a low value resistor with two contacts. Bridge the contacts with something conductive and the tip heats.
If it has enough voltage to light an LED and it has enough current to get hot, then it will light-up the base-emitter or base-collector junction of a transistor too. ;D

 

jstevenperry

Nov 25, 2005
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I've heard that it takes a fair bit of pressure to activate the mechanism, which makes it difficult to use for some delicate operations.

 

gogo2520

Aug 14, 2005
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I have one and ya it looks pretty. I don't use it because it sucks up battires fast. and you really got to fanagel around with it to get it to solder. Its like a test to see if its going to work this time or not. Like I said I got one, its on my bench or shelf someware and it sure looks pretty. Good thing  I got a weller too ;D
                                                    have fun
                                                        gogo

 

logan_dslasher

Jul 23, 2004
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gogo2520 said:
its on my bench or shelf someware
sounds like your not using it anymore, and probably will not! can you ship it to me then?  ;D ehehe.. i once heard that there is a soldering iron that uses hot air to melt the lead? something like that exists?
 

gogo2520

Aug 14, 2005
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Hi logan
You mean something like this
http://www.web-tronics.com/esdsacpucore.html
  I don't have one of these yet. But it would be nice to have.

You don't want the cold soldering Tool I got, I broke one tip trying to make it work and the other on is the big one. It take 4 aa battires to get it to work and you might get 5 good solder joints out of it befor you have change batteries.
                                gogo

 

logan_dslasher

Jul 23, 2004
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that was cool! i mean hot! ehehe.. one of my thesis proposal ideas was a soldering iron with a built-in desoldering pump.. it was just too crazy..  :p
 

jughead

Dec 29, 2004
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ok i got this thing as a gift its pretty cool!
but downside...

its finiky...

you have to touch the tip just right

also you dont tin the thing...weird...

it seems sort of bogus 2 me

my theory of operation:

i thinks its a dc-dc converer

like the ones found powering the light in your scanner...

a astable multiviborator clock goes through a stepup transformer

but with some sort of regulator for the thing so it dosent arc or put a hole thru your finger

i have cut pcbs by using the arc from a scanners dc-dc converter

and put holes thru the tips of my fingers... also melted solder and lit a cigarette


i cant do anzthing with it its weird

by the way it takes 4 AA batteries and they heat up terriblely

my opinion... it makes a better flashlight then it does a soldering iron...


i took a look inside...

1 little surface mount board... the main chipis a ....

I don't know! you tell me!

they grinded the ic # off!!!

they really must not want this piece of junk copied!

it could have been worse

i might have had to pay for it... nope i got it as a gift...

 

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