How To Solder: When soldering, NEVER apply solder directly to the soldering iron (except when "tinning" the tip of the iron). Solder is not applied directly from the iron to the electronics. In fact, touching the actual solder site with the soldering iron is often the worst thing you can do. This is because, irritatingly, the solder is very often more attracted to the soldering iron than the spot where you actually want the solder to go. The iron seems to have an almost magnetic attraction for the molten solder, and when this happens, touching the iron directly to the soldering point will result in nothing more than a rounded blob of solder collected on the tip of the iron, with no solder actually on the joint. Attempting to add more solder will only increase the size of the blob on the iron, until gravity finally takes over when the blob becomes so huge that its surface tension cannot keep it on the tip of the iron any longer. When this happens and the blob falls onto the solder joint, it is usually so huge that it floods the surrounding area, usually creating a short with some other part of the circuit. The reason this happens is because solder is most drawn to the hottest thing it touches. Since the soldering iron will always be hotter than the components you are trying to work with, the solder will always tend to stick to the iron. This is why you do not actually touch the iron directly to the solder. If you find your solder begins sticking to the iron, wipe the tip of your iron off on a moist sponge or piece of paper towel, and start over. The instinct is to get the solder on the iron, then wipe it on the solder joint, just as you would do with a paintbrush. That is the wrong way to solder. You solder by holding the iron near the joint (but not actually touching the joint) so that the joint itself becomes hot. Then you touch the solder to the joint, which will melt the solder around itself when it is hot enough. Also note that solder should never be used for physical connection strength. The connection should already be physically made with screws, crimping, or some other mechanical means before solder is applied. Soldering is done simply to create a better electrical connection (because solder itself is conductive), but solder should NEVER be used for physical strength. This sometimes creates confusion, because in fact plumbers do use solder to physically connect pipes; Understand that plumbers use a different composition of solder (and different flux, as well) than the solder that is necessary for electronics work. Typically, plumbing solder is 50% lead and 50% tin, and plumbers use acid flux. Electronic solder is 60% lead and 40% tin, and uses rosin flux. (Rosin being, essentially, hardened tree sap.) Once you understand these key soldering concepts, you can follow these steps to soldering: 1. Take health precautions before you start. People who solder all day as a job usually set up a small fan blowing away from their workspace, which helps to carry away the fumes from the burning flux and molten solder. You might also want to use needle-nosed pliers to hold the actual solder instead of keeping it in your hand, so your skin isn't in constant contact with it. Remember, the solder used with electronics is about 40% lead. 2. Prepare the parts to be soldered. If necessary, clean the components to be soldered with sandpaper, a file, or a wire brush, to remove oxide coatings or other dirt which might reduce the quality of your solder. If you are soldering a wire, ensure that you have stripped enough insulation off the end of the wire to allow for a proper solder joint (usually about half an inch). Make sure the component(s) to be soldered are held in place firmly so they don't move around while you're soldering. Remember: DO NOT use solder for physical connection strength! 3. Apply flux. Solder flux is the semi-secret ingredient of soldering that makes everything run much smoother. Flux serves two purposes: It cleans the area to be soldered, and it helps the solder flow more freely over the surface instead of having the solder just stick to itself in a ball. Both of these will make for a much better solder joint. Put a little flux on the area to be soldered and leave it for a moment; Just don't forget that the flux needs to be cleaned off before you do the actual soldering. 4. Pre-heat the soldering iron to operating temperature for a few minutes. If the iron does not already have a coating of solder on its tip, "tin" the iron by applying a very small bit of solder to the end of it. This will maintain a thin film of molten solder on the tip of the iron, which creates better heat conductivity. 5. Place the tip of the iron against the component to be soldered and hold it for a few seconds to heat it up. Do not apply the solder without first heating up the component to be soldered (this makes for a much better solder and helps prevent "cold solder joints"). 6. While still holding the hot iron against the electronics, bring in the solder, and lightly touch it to the soldering point. Rather than pressing it into place, simply allow the solder to run off and settle into a tiny puddle. 7. Remove the solder, and remove the soldering iron a few seconds later. A smooth, even coating of solder should remain. Let the solder cool and harden for a while before you stress or move the new joint. Being able to solder effectively takes some practice. Be sure to try soldering some "test" joints on cheap components before you do real- world soldering.