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Steve, I was reluctant to buy just a battery powered iron thinking the batteries wouldn't last long or provide enough heat. Thoughts?
I have been following this thread, and those were also my thoughts. How much "oomph" (wattage) can be squeezed out of AA batteries? Seems that it would not have enough thermal capacity for soldering rail(joints).It will be interesting to find out. Also, how long do the batteries last?...To be honest, I really prefer a good quality temperature-controller 40W pencil-type iron for soldering at home.
Otto, Pete.The batteries (4 x AA), last me four or five uses on average. It gets really hot, like 1000F. I’ve never really used it for solid continuous soldering projects though, more for the odd insitu fix like broken wire joints and putting in additional feeder wire and such under the layout. Batteries wouldn’t last long enough for any serious solid repeated use IMHO.
I use this Master Appliance Butane soldering iron. https://www.masterappliance.com/ultratorch-ut-100sik-soldering-iron-heat-tool/Martin Myers
I'd be scared to use open flame under the layout, or to solder board connections. But perhaps I'm missing something....In any case, I pulled the trigger on a $26 rechargeable (and returnable) from Amazon, should be here in a few days. I'll post a review, my Covid malady permitting (I've been down with it for over a week; annoying, but not serious, so far).Thanks for your suggestion @MPA86, that looks like a good choice for heavier workOtto K.
The flame isn't open - it is shielded and heats the iron tip, not your work piece.A soldering torch, on the other hand, would be all kinds of fun under the layout.