Soldering :P

Nicola's picture

Hello, i need help :)

I have a perfboard, of the kind with all holes isolated from each other, like this one. I then have two of this male header strip inserted on the perfboar, parallel and spaced by one empy hole row. Now i have to solder the pins of one line with the one of the other, it making many 3-holes connection bridges (i hope i explained clearly).

What's the right/better way to do this? I tried making a bridge with the solder but ended up in a mess. I also tried using a little piece of solid wire for each two pins but it is ugly as hell..

 any help appreciated :)

CaptainTuna's picture

i have made "bridges" with

i have made "bridges" with solder and didn't end up in a mess. Maybe you should practice a bit with it and then you'll be fine.

I did that by touching the areas i want to join with the soldering iron (2 holes at a time) and applying solder NOT directly on the iron, as you should never do, but on the areas (heat-transferring) around the holes.

If you manage to create a "path of heat" with your iron then the solder will stick to it, that's the trick. :=) 

Nicola's picture

grazie mille tuna :)i have a

grazie mille tuna :)

i have a very old and almost rusty iron, i guess it is not helping at all (solder have an hard time melting with it). I think i'm buing a new one in these days.

How do you touch two holes at the same time? do you put the tip horizontal or something?

rik's picture

tips on tips

Soldering tips come in shapes and sizes. Maybe you do not need to replace the entire iron, just the tip.

The two main tip designs are "pencil" and "chisel". The chisel shape has a flat end, like a screwdriver. That makes it much easier to touch two pads at once. Furthermore: tin your tip, clean your tip, tin your tip again. Use soldering tin with rosin in it.

Nicola's picture

the one i'm using doesn't

the one i'm using doesn't have repleaceable tips, it is made with a single body.. i'll change it and buy a couple of different tips as you suggested

thanks 

CaptainTuna's picture

remember this: the point(?)

remember this: the point(?) or tip (punta) of the soldering iron does not transfer heat so you have to use the sides of it.
voodoobot's picture

I use solid wire , best way

I use solid wire , best way I've found is to get a long piece of wire(22gauge I think), bend the tip  to the length that you want, then solder that on, the just snip the rest of the wire off at the joint with nail clippers. I don't often use short wire briges though as they tend to get messy if you need to rework them. A good pair of tweezers helps as well....most electronics shops have them.

I've found that using the extra wire from components works great, use heat shrink though to cover the bare wire. Also doing a complete wire layout ah la my current blog. http://letsmakerobots.com/node/2444

Nicola's picture

I did it :PIfinally

I did it :P

Ifinally purchased a new soldering iron and i must say that only now i understand how unsuitable my old one was. With this the solder melt like butter on an hot knife :)

 

here's the result (please don't be too harsh on your judication :P ):

1001081zyd6.jpg 

 

1001080ztv0.jpg 

Mr Clean's picture

Better than I could do!

Better than I could do!
Nicola's picture

AND IT WORKSSSSSS!!! YAYYY

AND IT WORKSSSSSS!!! YAYYY my first circuit!! Oh my god i can't believe, at first shot it run perfectly!! :P

my first circuit :P i'll always remember this moment :P 

Mr Clean's picture

Congratulations!  :D

Congratulations!  :D
rik's picture

good on you!

congratulations

now what does this board do again?

Nicola's picture

thanks :Pit's an analog to

thanks :P

it's an analog to digital conversion chip, with 8 inputs and an i2c interface, and 12 bits of resolution. Handy if you run out of analong inputs on your board (like i did) and if you love all things i2c (like i do :P)

Here's a "schematic" picture and another of the guy in action :P

5de7ab68091b2c4dbeee088ac1cd95a3.jpg

 

007a650c9357eb4659a45656c4475199.jpg

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