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solder technique, Will it hold???


Wegalaxy
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Hello,

 

Today I soldered for the 3rd time in my life.

I soldered wires together which are connecting the tamiya connector to the gun. 

(rear wired ARP 9)

I stripped the end of the wires and intertwined them till they held well on their own. I then melted the solder onto the soldering rod and smeared blobs of solder to the wires to secure them together. It looks pretty bad but holds. I then wrapped them in electrical tape.

 

I was unaware that the actual way to solder is to heat the wire and then apply the solder direct onto the wire.

 

The gun shoots fine and all its normal actions are working.

 

Will the incorrect soldering method which I have used damage the gun in the long run?

 

I use 11.1 lipos with my ARP 9.

 

Thanks

 

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If in doubt, re-do it.  You'll only get better with practice.  I'd stick with 60/40 or 63/37 tin/lead rosin flux cored solder. Brands can be a holy war, I use Stannol, but they've discontinued the 60/39/1 wire that I preferred, so sod em. ;) 

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@Rogerborg @EDcase

Thank you for the help I really appreciate it. Regarding re doing it I'm not sure I can as there is very little wire left with out rewiring the whole thing. 

 

Regarding the solder I've already done. What do you think will happen if I continue to use it with my botched job?

 

Thanks

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It should be OK imo, I've rejoined wires with as little as a windproof lighter and some solder on a field before, the issues it could cause however are as follows, a bad solder joint can increase the resistance in the wires it's on which can cause the solder joint to heat up under full auto and potentially break the connection, the increased resistance can also make your gun run slower sooner as the battery's voltage decreases, this shouldn't be a massive issue though as it's not likely to destroy the gun or make it explode, if it feels like it's dying quicker than normal consider refreshing the joint, the best way to rejoin them would be to tin both ends of wire with solder (use high temperature solder with a flux core if you can), then using the iron get them both nice and hot, (I often use clothes pegs to hold the 2 wires stable whilst I do this) and once hot. Dab a little more solder on to flow the joint nicely, finish up with a good blow, some heatshrink or sparkies tape.

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3 hours ago, Wegalaxy said:

Regarding the solder I've already done. What do you think will happen if I continue to use it with my botched job?

It depends how good/bad it is.

 

If its OK then it will be fine but if its not making a good connection then it will heat up as mentioned above.

Worst case is it heats up enough to come apart and cause a 'short' (plus & minus touch) then you get fire.

 

Fire 10 bursts on full auto with a few seconds between each burst.  Then feel the cable and plug around the solder point to see if anything gets warm.

If it does then re-solder it.

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3 hours ago, ArseBurgers420 said:

a bad solder joint can increase the resistance in the wires it's on which can cause the solder joint to heat up under full auto and potentially break the connection

 

That's a good point, you're essentially introducing a fuse into the circuit.  The only real hazard I could see would be stalling the motor out and locking up the gearbox.

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