Tj,
Soldering takes some practice before you get good at it.
Remember the old saying, "Cleanliness is next to..."
Well, it really does apply to soldering. Isopropyl alcohol is your friend. 99% pure or better is "the good stuff"; you may be able to get some at work. Ace Hardware sells it in small cans, but it's expensive. If you're desperate, Wal-mart sells 90% isopropyl near the pharmacy. Don't use anything less than 90%, as it contains too much water.
It's a good idea to wear gloves while soldering. It protects your hands, and also keeps your finger oils off the solder and parts. If that feels too clumsy, then skip the gloves - but make sure your hands are clean.
Use an acid brush (black nylon bristles, rolled metal handle, available at auto parts stores) to apply the isopropyl alcohol with. It will take off finger oils, etc. that prevent the solder from sticking. It won't do a darn thing about corrosion though.
If there is any corrosion on the leads of the parts or on the PCB, you can use a green Scotch-brite pad (available at any grocery store in the cleaning section) to remove it. Cheap, convenient and effective.
If your parts and solder are really clean, you really shouldn't need flux. If you DO use flux, just use a little bit of rosin flux.
Solder: Sn63/Pb37 solder is the easiest to use. It is called "eutectic" solder because it has no plastic state; it goes right from a liquid to a solid. It's mostly referred to as 63/37. If you can't get that easily, 60/40 is the next best thing.
The soldering iron tip needs to be clean, bright, tinned, and at the right temp. 25 Watts is decent for general purpose electronic soldering, but a controlled temp tip is much better.
Use small amounts of solder. Apply heat to the junction of the wire and the board. Then apply solder to the wire/board junction, not the iron.
Don't move the connection while it's cooling.
If the joint looks like a big grey wrinkled blob, you need to re-do it.
Solder-wick is a braided copper strip that aids greatly in removing excess solder. You place the wick on the junction, and apply heat to the wick. It sucks the solder right up.
Soldering takes some practice before you get good at it.
Remember the old saying, "Cleanliness is next to..."
Well, it really does apply to soldering. Isopropyl alcohol is your friend. 99% pure or better is "the good stuff"; you may be able to get some at work. Ace Hardware sells it in small cans, but it's expensive. If you're desperate, Wal-mart sells 90% isopropyl near the pharmacy. Don't use anything less than 90%, as it contains too much water.
It's a good idea to wear gloves while soldering. It protects your hands, and also keeps your finger oils off the solder and parts. If that feels too clumsy, then skip the gloves - but make sure your hands are clean.
Use an acid brush (black nylon bristles, rolled metal handle, available at auto parts stores) to apply the isopropyl alcohol with. It will take off finger oils, etc. that prevent the solder from sticking. It won't do a darn thing about corrosion though.
If there is any corrosion on the leads of the parts or on the PCB, you can use a green Scotch-brite pad (available at any grocery store in the cleaning section) to remove it. Cheap, convenient and effective.
If your parts and solder are really clean, you really shouldn't need flux. If you DO use flux, just use a little bit of rosin flux.
Solder: Sn63/Pb37 solder is the easiest to use. It is called "eutectic" solder because it has no plastic state; it goes right from a liquid to a solid. It's mostly referred to as 63/37. If you can't get that easily, 60/40 is the next best thing.
The soldering iron tip needs to be clean, bright, tinned, and at the right temp. 25 Watts is decent for general purpose electronic soldering, but a controlled temp tip is much better.
Use small amounts of solder. Apply heat to the junction of the wire and the board. Then apply solder to the wire/board junction, not the iron.
Don't move the connection while it's cooling.
If the joint looks like a big grey wrinkled blob, you need to re-do it.
Solder-wick is a braided copper strip that aids greatly in removing excess solder. You place the wick on the junction, and apply heat to the wick. It sucks the solder right up.