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... ISO-TIP ... I don't know exactly why I abandoned it ... I have no clue where the charger might be. ...
@mmagliaro While this topic is up, I seem to recall Max mentioning nickel plating his solder tips to rejuvenate them when they need replaced otherwise. I'm not interested in this as a money saving thing for all but once you have the plating setup, if it's viable and actually works well, why not? I'm sure you would clean and dress the tip shape to bright metal but curious how well it holds up in use, if I'm even remembering this accurately.
NOW I remember why I gave up on it... the charger I had was a plug-in cord. This did not work well on my cluttered bench, 40 years later - same problem. With no easy place to set the iron down safely while the tip was still hot and the cord droop wanting to pull on the handle... you can figure out the rest. Portable (toolbox) use didn't work well, either. Lacking a cap, no job was a quick hit-and-run, I had to wait for the tip to cool before packing up. I bought a Wahl butane iron for field work which had a cap, but it has its own issues (and I do know where it is, also gathering dust).But the "latest" version - still the old technology, NiCad, incandescent worklight and all - has a drop-in stand, so it'll be perfect for working on the layout.
And you know this how?
I guess this is the current equivalent (?):https://iso-tip.com/product/power-pro-soldering-iron-kit-boxed-7904
... I dislike an iron at the bench or table with a cord hanging off it, ready to get snagged and pulled off said bench or table.
Exactly. This is my issue with soldering on the layout, and I don't care for the bulk/in-the-way situation with a soldering station in that setting. Even the stand I use with the little 15W Weller pencil is a PITA as its cord sticks up and I try to navigate around and under the cord with a stick of flex I've just soldered leads to. Time to go back to my roots with a cordless.When the going gets serious I've had a high-end Metcal dual-port rework station for years. It has temp-controlled inductive cartridge elements and tips. It's overkill for most MRR work, and strictly a "clean workbench" (what's that?) type of tool. I did get a couple of tips for it intended for the layout, but found out real quickly its bulk, weight (about 10#) and fat cords were just not going to work sitting on the benchwork while I fiddled with track. Ugh.
Oh, and I have a torch for soldering copper tubing (and making cream brulee . . . )John C.
The OP started this thread by talking about "upping his game" with respect to DCC decoder installation, not soldering track. I never use my Pace for soldering track. This is strictly a bench tool for soldering 32-gauge wire to 1/16" pads on a decoder or cell-phone type speaker with spring leads, or soldering 34-gauge magnet wire to the almost-invisible pads on a 603 SMT LED or soldering 1/8 watt SMT resistors to a tiny piece of circuit board.For soldering Atlas code 55 track, I have my 25-watt Weller iron. For making turnouts using Fast Track jigs or paper templates, I have my 40-watt Weller iron (though a resistance soldering unit would be a better tool for turnout construction).My father-in-law, a master carpenter, taught me that nothing beats having the exactly right tool for the job. A pencil-type digital soldering station like the Pace is the right tool for small-component electrical soldering; it's NOT the right tool for track or turnout construction. But my Weller irons aren't the right tool for soldering SMT components. With all 3, I have the tool I need for the job at hand.Oh, and I have a torch for soldering copper tubing (and making cream brulee . . . )John C.
I would have to respectfully disagree that a small station is not the right tool for track, maybe not for soldering on the layout, but when bench soldering anything, I find my station to be indispensable except under the layout (or on top) but unfortunately that is all I have or will have.