Here is my last attempt. I felt like adding solder afterward is it the way to do it.
all comments welcomed
Thanks
all comments welcomed
Thanks
That could be one of the reasons. The wire could also have already had some grime on it. If the solder wasn't bonding to the wire, it's either due to surface contamination, improper wetting, or too much solder.so the oil on my fingers could be the reason why the tin was not sticking or encompassing the wires?
I use liquid rosin flux. I bought a liter in the mid-1990's and still have most of the liter left.so what kind of flux to get for that?
Use a cotton ball dampened with acetone and wipe off the grime on the surface. It'd be best to wear a latex glove because acetone is hard on your skin.yes I have acetone . how much to apply and when?
You shouldn't need to add more solder after soldering the joint. You should be heating the wires and applying solder until it flows over the entire area. I couldn't see where you were applying the solder or if it was actually flowing.I felt like adding solder afterward is it the way to do it.

hi could the black also come from the rubber insulator I touched with the iron?Like can melted rubber travel on -in the liquid solder?That could be one of the reasons. The wire could also have already had some grime on it. If the solder wasn't bonding to the wire, it's either due to surface contamination, improper wetting, or too much solder.
I use liquid rosin flux. I bought a liter in the mid-1990's and still have most of the liter left.
Use a cotton ball dampened with acetone and wipe off the grime on the surface. It'd be best to wear a latex glove because acetone is hard on your skin.
Apply whenever you need to remove grime and just before attempting to solder.

Yes, but why would you touch it with the iron? It's not what you're trying to solder.hi could the black also come from the rubber insulator I touched with the iron?
That's the type I'm using. The Amazon price works out to just under $400/liter. I paid around $20/liter (albeit 30 years ago).the little bottle is it the kind of flux that would help solder travel?
The tip on your iron is still way too big.I took note of you advice and watched the videos. good learning. putting the iron under will already help me see better among other things.
to insulate soldered connections (connector pins etc) use heat shrink. do not use electrical tape - it is a temporary measure. if you leave it on long enough it will become lose, come off and leave sticky mess.and at the end of a work do you guys like using electrical tape to insulate the solder . what are pros and cons of electrical tape vs shrinking protector vs? other ways Thanks