I am 56 years old and had 1 class in Jr High. Back then there wasnt a cell phone in anyones hand. This is invaluable information. Those of you that were born into this information age really have no idea that in iorder to get this information back in my day I would have had to go to someone like this fine gentleman in person and ask him everything I would need to get a project done. Thanks for your help sir.
Trust me, I'm hip! Once, in order to learn a song on guitar, (Marty Robbin's "El Paso") and this is no joke, I had to do a bunch a coke so I could stay up all night in order to harass the night shift DJs at 2 different Country/Western radio stations and request the tune. That was some hard work back then. Nowadays, 6 string newbies hit the cell phone's UA-cam "Play" button and they got every song in the Universe being transcribed and taught to em for free or at a minimal membership fee. Don't even get me started on the usually blurry and still life world of our era's Porn Industry compared to the "You'll go blind in 20 minutes" high resolution 5k VR version of rub n tug material these kids have today!
when I saw this was 30mins long i thought "there's no way i'm watching the whole thing", by the time it ended I thought "wait what, it's already been 30mins?", That's when you know the information was presented clearly and in an interesting way, I even went and tried applying the tips taught in this video and they did work! great explanation
I was married to a very hands-on, practical guy who was able to turn his hand to anything and had a garage full of 'men's toys' to prove it. This meant I didn't have to learn any 'man skills' as he would have been most offended if I had tried. Now, I find I have a garage full of equipment I don't have the first clue how to use and many projects around the house that need attending to. So, I have decided to learn. I have watched your video twice and I am now off to mend my favourite clock that has a wire come adrift inside it! Your calm, patient way of explaining now only HOW you do things but WHY as well has made me feel very confident. Now, if you could just do a video covering all of the other things that I need to learn, I will be a loyal follower forever! Thank you so much for demystifying soldering for me, that was truly awesome and a great addition to my skill set! 👍😁
half the reason I watch handyman, builld, fix videos is to drool over the insane tools I will never own. But I can't argue the fact you made a good point.
I agree. Although with that said. There are better stations available in the same price range. The knockoff of the hakko 936D/937D is available around the same price. And imho would be much better. It uses either the hakko 900m or 900L tips as well...I think 900m. I have one myself. I also have a trakpower 935D (uses hakko 900l tips) which is also a great option but then your getting into hakko price territory as well.
You'd be doing yourself a favor if you check out something like the TS100. The only drawback with it compared to a high buck soldering station is that interchanging the tips requires a hex wrench. Very useful and can operate with battery power at remote locations, and gives up nothing significant to the expensive stations.
ABSOLUTELY! I'm a complete noob when it comes to Soldering, and I need to teach myself to solder (properly) inorder to put together a DIY synthesizer I purchased recently. After that, I plan to buy many DIY (Assembly Required) Euro Rack Synthesizer modules to begin my journey into Euro Rack. Befaco is one of the more well-known brands that offers the modules in pieces/individual components with assembly done by the purchaser. The benefit of this is, that it dramatically cuts down on the final cost of the modules. That being said, the downside is, I don't receive the benefits of the module manufacturer's quality control, and if I muck something up, I don't know enough about the individual components themselves to know what I did wrong. But learning as I go is all part of the fun! 😬 In any case, this type of incredibly detailed tutorial with close-ups _AND_ explanations of how soldering & soldering components work together *is priceless for newbies!* Huge thumbs-up for this video! 👍
Sure, I am no beginner to soldering but I learned a lot of the "right way" to do it with this video and understand key things. Superb quality of video and voice, even if I am not a native english speaker, could understand straight even with the Aussie accent...
This is without a doubt, the best, most thorough and detailed soldering I have ever watched. It's the first one that explained why we need to do these various steps and not just "here's how". Thank you for the great beginner's guide!
Inspite of the thousand dollars worth of equipment setting there you can do just as good a job with a hundred dollars worth and good close attention to detail. I did however learn several thousand dollars worth of good technique. Thank you sir.
Agreed. This is by far the best one I’ve watched so far. It provides context and technical details that give you a better overall understanding than simply following a list of steps
Really great guide for beginners! A small little tip when heating the heat-shrink is to heat and shrink the middle first (where you wielded the wires), then move to one side and then cross to the other side. The reason is that if you start shrinking on one side then go to the other side, you can create a small air bubble around the area where you wielded the wires together. If you heat the heat-shrink's middle part first and then go toward the ends of the heat-shrink, any potential air bubble that could form within the small gaps will have room to leave on both still opened side of the heat-shrink and as you shrink toward 1 end, the air will be forced out and then going toward the other end will leave the heat-shrink with no chance for any air gap. This trick does comes with the potential of heating the middle too much so it requires a bit of practice and timing, but it raise the durability of the repair further.
He is the best. I'm new to Comments on UA-cam so I didn't know where to tell him how amazing a teacher he is - I think my comment is in "About". Bruce, you are excellent.
I'm a science engineer at a local highschool. I teach practical skills for biology, like how to use a microscope, to our students. I really enjoy your way of explaining and especially appreciate the work you've put in to share and show the details with us to support your lesson/guide like for example using the microscope to show the flux. In my opinion these things really make a difference. I'm new to your channel and this is my first video but i'm definitely going to have a look at your other videos to see if I find some more interesting topics there and of course I'll sub to your channel.
i lost my dad a year ago and he was just like you, i watch your videos to cope with my pain. my mum now has serious cancer and your videos make me forget about all my issues and depresion.
I know I'm late to the party with this comment but only recently found this and just wanted to thank you for the effort you have put into this and wanted to say that it's cleared up alot of things that I still wonder about, despite countless hours of reading up on it and your presentation is flawless. Keep up the good work!
After watching someone else's atrocious "How To" solder video, UA-cam brought me here to this video. What a pleasure to watch and learn from. Good job.
You just gave me the info I needed. I've been told over and over to put solder on the tip first and not to worry about the flux if the solder has flux core. I end up cleaning the tip constantly, only to dirty it up again just as quickly. I also changed my tip to a bevel and turned my heat up. I have a huge smile on my face having properly repaired my guitar pedal board! Thank you for the information!
I’m just trying to learn enough to repair old video game stuff but now I’m gonna watch part 2 because it’s interesting! Great video! Thanks for the help!
When I thought I knew what I was doing….. this just upped my soldering skills quite a bit. Very informative and actually showing how it’s done helps us hands on learners. No matter how old the video may be. It’s a good watch.
I'm just trying to get in to soldering. Thanks for putting this video together. This is 33 minutes of amazing information and instruction. The close-ups with the microscope really add the level of detail I was looking for. The best part is that I'm able to immediately apply the information shared here to my own projects!
I’m 55 and can do a lot of construction and fairly handy. I never knew these important bits of info and soldering was always very ugly. This was an awesome instructional video. I think I’ll be a soldering fool in no time now. Great video. Great breakdown. The microscope was perfect. Thank you so much
This is incredible, the best soldering tutorial I have seen. So informational and had all of my attention for the full half hour. Recently started upgrading toy cars to RC race cars and was really struggling with the soldering.
Wow! thank you so much your video was so awesome. I don't have to watch 10 videos to understand the beautiful knowledge you shared. I will be watching your next video. Also, you saved me from a car wire repair mistake. I feel full as if I had a bowl with food. Delicious 😋 😆 Your detail explanation and illustrations was easy to digest. Thanks again great video!!!
You know a good youtube video is when you are fed with good info don't see any jump cuts and those flashy focus effects and you still finish to watch from beginning to end. People, this is a real youtuber we are witnessing just like the OG youtube days. Oh wait it's a 30mins video. Thanks for sharing your knowledge sir.
Brilliant tutorial on how to solder. One point I want to make that you did not cover in your lesson. I will cover it here. The process of coating parts you are going to solder is called "Tinning" It helps the solder adhere to other parts. One important step is to also tin the tip of your soldering iron. This helps in transferring heat to the part you are soldering. You don't' need to use very much solder to tin your iron. Just enough to make is silver looking. One other tip. The part in the video where two wires are soldered together. This joint is called a Union splice. A way to make a union splice even stronger, is to twist the two pieces of wire together, in parallel before soldering. Don't twist them like a pig tail (that is a different type of splice) When you twist the wires together. A union splice is one of the strongest and most common splices you will make when working with electronics.
Excellent teaching. You started from the very foundation and worked your way up to the basics highlighting the importance of good technique. Very much appreciated.
When I was taught to solder as an apprentice in the early seventies, we would always wet the tip with a little solder before applying it to the work this aids heat transfer, allowing a faster job, less chance to melt the insulation or damage components through heat transfer, we were marked down for melting the insulation, and obviously dry joints.
I never once thought about doing soldering until I saw this video. Thank you. Now I will upgrade myself. I'm no longer just a software developer. I'm now a repairman!
The amount of detail in this was amazing; the pace is much appreciated. UA-cam's player has a speed settings for a reason, and videos that allow for this much extra detail makes me happy to have more control over how much I want to soak in.
A great video - without jumpy cuts or gabbling instructions that make most ‘how-to‘ vids for beginners useless - a clear, calm, skilful teacher. And everything in focus! Thank you!
So glad i took pause & watched your tutorial on soldering. While I've been soldering wires together on vehicles for years there's been countless times where i wasn't all that sincerely satisfied with the overall end result/resistance. WOW!!! The difference between soldering on electronic components & joining a couple of auto wires together is taught on 2 totally different levels. After having watched your Soldering Tutorial i can most assurredly state that my previous soldering methodology is history. Anyways in all earnestness i Thank You Very Much for totally upping the overall quality of all my future soldering efforts. I'd yack more but i need to run out & acquire a tin of that Rosin Paste Flux before i forget what its called. Heck, i wasn't even aware that solder had the stuff inside it nor all the differences between the types of solder previously i just grabbed whatever was convenient or happened to cost the least. Nor have i ever thought to solder the end of the wires prior to actually soldering the 2 together. No doubt my days of scratching my head & wondering where those pesky missing Ohms went off to are now well behind me. THANKS AGAIN!
Sir, you are a great straight forward and methodical teacher who knows how to captivate and maintain the attention to your work...Your way of teaching so much reminds me of my 7th grade Math teacher...
That example of joining two wires without any mechanical coupling is astounding! If that wire is never subjected to any mechanical load or flexing, you will probably get away with it. If, however, it is a conductor subject to motion or flexing, it isn’t very hard to rip the joint apart if all that is carrying the strain is just the solder.
Mr. Branchus, thanks very much for making this video. Out of the plethoras of videos I’ve watched yours covered everything I was interested in learning. I’m 56 and getting ready to build my first fpv quad racing drone. I’ve got all my equipment including my now necessary wearable magnifying glasses and some 63/37 rosin core solder. I’m a little nervous, but I guess I’ll find out soon enough if I can solder or not. Thanks again for making this very helpful video.
This makes me wish I had gone to school for this kind of thing. Wonderfully done lessons, I've been watching people solder for a couple years online, but you broke down basics that I had never heard of. Fundamentals, if you will. Thank you for taking the time to make this. I'm so excited to get started.
Very best beginners guide -i have been trying and failing to solder for two bloody years and I just couldn't do it! This dude made me UNDERSTAND what soldering actually does! One day! And I can solder! Thanks so much! Your a gem!
Brilliant, I came here for part 2 but I'm heading back to part 2 now , thank you for the clear easy to follow instructions and the work you put in editing and setting the cameras up and the rest , great work 👍
Lead takes a much higher temperature to burn. Lead is NOT in solder fumes. That’s the flux. Lead free is better for the environment but you’re not “breathing in lead” if you’re soldering with lead solder. Great video, I just thought I’d point that out.
@@BranchusCreations Not that I heard in this one, maybe I missed it but at 10:00 you talk about lead solder being poisonous so ensure you have plenty of ventilation. That’s why I mentioned what I did in case people were nervous due to being a hobbyist, thinking they’re going to get lead poisoning because they fix something every 12 months.
Very professional sir. I am very surprised this video doesn't have millions of views. This is the best tutorial on soldering I've seen on UA-cam so far. Bravo.
Just want to say I got the basics down but still hearing your voice explaining everything is just so soothing I still play it when I'm doing my little projects thank you sir
You just repaired the RCM in my car. Ive been stranded for days. Seriously, easy learning under stress. Very good teacher. Like he was over my shoulder correcting my mistakes LIVE. Next thing I know im back on the road. Try sleeping in a Crossfire....for 4 days and realize you are a Hero to me friend!
I've been soldering for 15 years with many imperfections in the auto-industry. Your video helped clear up some of my mistakes, I'm sure I will improve my techniques from now :)
Thank you for this excellent video! This was incredibly informative for me, even though I'm old and built countless Heathkits "back in the day". I was recently helping one of my kids add a Bluetooth board into an early-gen iPod, and ran across this for training. I'm going to send him the link.
Thank you so much. I used to build Heath kits with my dad. Now at 64 I'm repairing home appliances, "solar light, etc," for neighbors and forgot how to solder. Your mention of temperatures help along with flux.
I knew ALL of those techniques, BUT... he instantly comes off as some who knows they've mastered their field, yet humble enough to focus more towards teaching ppl WHY the process should be followed, so I was instantly hooked & I learned a few "whys". Great stuff 👍definitely worth a like & a follow.
Fantastic job ! I needed to learn the basics for a school projet and your video was just perfect. It is so satisfying to see those neat joints on the circuit board. Big thank you from Belgium.
I've soldered before but I've never done it properly. I just muddled through. With your simply explained teachings, I opened up a new soldering station that I bought a while ago and I was able to transfer the information you shared directly to a project I wanted to do. Great stuff and thank you.
Excellent Vid for Beginners and Old Timers will suffer NO harm from revisiting the Basics. I am an OLD (80yrs) time and have a nice soldering station BUT I soooo appreciate your demonstrating with the inexpensive Model as it is easy to become convinced that its ALL about the Fancy equipment and NOT the technique! WELL DONE! Thank you
Thank you so much for this. For years I have attempted to repair things by soldering and although I achieved some success the results were always clumsy and crude. This video showed where I had been going wrong in the clearest way. Looking forward to trying out the techniques in my next DIY project! 😄
30 years of amateur soldering frustration sorted in half an hour, probably should have googled long ago ha ha ha. You my friend are a legend! Thank you.
Such a great video. You explained it really well! Loved the demonstrations on what and what no to do. I did my first soldering before I watched your video and I tried to bridge two pads together and made a mess! haha. I also burnt some pads (they look black and I can not put solder there anymore) and had to jump the connections to fix it. Anyway, Thanks for the video mate!
Just saying, like everyone else, this video is perfect. I was trying to fix my speedometer chips for the gear mode on my chevy 04 dash, and i needed this video. Got the facts straight, and the examples of detail helped so much.. i appreciate it, even if i replied 4 years later
Always had problem while soldering. Small thing to do but did not know the basics and no body to teach. Thanks for dedicating so much time on the subject educating.
Of course I just watched this after soldering lol. I saw the person apply solder to the tip of his iron and then put that bead on the tip of his iron to the wire on the PCB. Glad you showed me that isn't the way. Wish I knew that a little bit ago lol but I'm glad I know now. Do you recommend using the tiniest bit of flux when soldering to a board if you have the time? Like there's no harm is there? Also, I always worry that preheating the component/board/ even wire sometimes will damage it haha. How do I know if im applying too much heat beforehand? Either ways, super informative video. Surprised I watched the whole 30 min and it went by quick! You explained well. And the clear microscope shots were a *huge* help! (Of course as qwll as the demonstrations). But not a lot of people use microscopes and I feel its very helpful. The fact that you also used a cheaper solder iron to do this was amazing. The problem with a lot of tutorials is that they're using high end gear and the typical person watching a how-to video is new to the hobby and won't have the same gear. So that was a wonderful idea. Also, not to keep going on- but props to saying either pronunciation is correct! I feel the same way, too many people get up in arms over which is the correct way. The word pronunciation evolved differently in different areas; big deal. Lol. All in all, TOP NOTCH video. Firm handshakes all around 🤝 Seriously, good work, and quality video.
This guy is the Bob Ross of soldering... and a nice little happy blob of solder here.. ohhh see how nice that is? Man, I could watch this dude all day. What a great video, definitely going to try some of these tips on the next soldering job.
Very well shown. As a novice I greatly needed someone's help with how to solder. I have been trying to solder wire together and to a circuit board with very poor results, in fact you would say the worst you've seen. This has helped tremendously so thankyou very much.
Amazing video. I have tried many times to solder the simplest items and never really got the feel for it. Right after watching I dug out the old cheapo kit and wired up a light fixture. Guess what? It worked. The detail and time taken are much appreciated.
Thank you. From the beginning to end I learned every step of the way. I’m carpenter and can do plumbing yet this is a whole new experience. So many other videos start off like they’re for beginners and end either talking to us we’re pros that understand or they go off the rails and you just can’t stop watching because you know they’re going grab the hot end any sec and don’t want to miss it. Lol Again Thank you and I hope you have lots of videos because I think you’d make a great teacher and you seem to have wealth of knowledge to share.
25:17 I would probably try and remove the sharp pointy bit on the left (shiny bit) of the top wire where it is most likely where the soldering iron left off leaving a sharp point which could penetrate the heatshrink. Good Vid though!
Absolutely fantastic! I learned more in half an hour than in 5 years of getting by and ruining tips and pads on my FPV quadcopter’s electronics I bought flux last week and my soldering results are 100 times better! Now I know why and how flux works! Thank you 🙏
This is such an extremely vivid and detailed account of soldering. The concept seems simple, yet I found myself yearning for a more detailed explanation. Thanks
Thank you. Soldering has always been the biggest missing skill in my technical skillset, but this made me feel so much more comfortable in learning how to do it.
One of my favorite videos on UA-cam. Super informative and very opinionated, this video will save you YEARS of mistakes. Thanks much! Recommend the rest of the series
New to soldering, trying to save money by repairing my aftermarket android head unit on my car with an exploded capacitor with electrolyte fluid everywhere. My dad was a genius but he passed so now i must learn myself. This video is very informative so i thank you for it. I'm going to try and repair retro gaming consoles after i repair my stereo head unit as my knowledge expands. Again thank you mate.
I am 56 years old and had 1 class in Jr High. Back then there wasnt a cell phone in anyones hand. This is invaluable information. Those of you that were born into this information age really have no idea that in iorder to get this information back in my day I would have had to go to someone like this fine gentleman in person and ask him everything I would need to get a project done. Thanks for your help sir.
Trust me, I'm hip! Once, in order to learn a song on guitar, (Marty Robbin's "El Paso") and this is no joke, I had to do a bunch a coke so I could stay up all night in order to harass the night shift DJs at 2 different Country/Western radio stations and request the tune. That was some hard work back then. Nowadays, 6 string newbies hit the cell phone's UA-cam "Play" button and they got every song in the Universe being transcribed and taught to em for free or at a minimal membership fee. Don't even get me started on the usually blurry and still life world of our era's Porn Industry compared to the "You'll go blind in 20 minutes" high resolution 5k VR version of rub n tug material these kids have today!
I’m 49 and lay off the “BACK IN MY DAY” nonsense, seriously 🙄
4 years later....this is a great in depth soldering vid. One o the best how to videos I've come across. Thank you!!
when I saw this was 30mins long i thought "there's no way i'm watching the whole thing", by the time it ended I thought "wait what, it's already been 30mins?", That's when you know the information was presented clearly and in an interesting way, I even went and tried applying the tips taught in this video and they did work! great explanation
IMO thats the sign of a good lesson. you don't notice the time go by, and are left wanting to do more
Same here, I feel like every minutes is more interesting haha!
I'm at 0:35, and your comment motivated me to watch the whole video
@@xxsantyxx Exactly, much better then straining your eyes trying to see what's going on like most videos.
Just finished watching at 1.5 speed 🖖
I was married to a very hands-on, practical guy who was able to turn his hand to anything and had a garage full of 'men's toys' to prove it. This meant I didn't have to learn any 'man skills' as he would have been most offended if I had tried. Now, I find I have a garage full of equipment I don't have the first clue how to use and many projects around the house that need attending to. So, I have decided to learn. I have watched your video twice and I am now off to mend my favourite clock that has a wire come adrift inside it! Your calm, patient way of explaining now only HOW you do things but WHY as well has made me feel very confident. Now, if you could just do a video covering all of the other things that I need to learn, I will be a loyal follower forever! Thank you so much for demystifying soldering for me, that was truly awesome and a great addition to my skill set! 👍😁
When you took out a cheap soldering station, i instantly upvoted. It's good to keep things like this in mind, and it shows you care.
half the reason I watch handyman, builld, fix videos is to drool over the insane tools I will never own. But I can't argue the fact you made a good point.
same
I agree. Although with that said. There are better stations available in the same price range. The knockoff of the hakko 936D/937D is available around the same price. And imho would be much better. It uses either the hakko 900m or 900L tips as well...I think 900m. I have one myself. I also have a trakpower 935D (uses hakko 900l tips) which is also a great option but then your getting into hakko price territory as well.
the cheap station is what someone will start with, so it good that he uses one
You'd be doing yourself a favor if you check out something like the TS100. The only drawback with it compared to a high buck soldering station is that interchanging the tips requires a hex wrench.
Very useful and can operate with battery power at remote locations, and gives up nothing significant to the expensive stations.
I don't write comments even for good videos but I must say that you explained it very well.
the detailed explanations together with the close up shots from the microscope really help show what this is about, thank you!
I agree! This is a terrifically put together video, very well done to the creator! :)
ABSOLUTELY! I'm a complete noob when it comes to Soldering, and I need to teach myself to solder (properly) inorder to put together a DIY synthesizer I purchased recently. After that, I plan to buy many DIY (Assembly Required) Euro Rack Synthesizer modules to begin my journey into Euro Rack. Befaco is one of the more well-known brands that offers the modules in pieces/individual components with assembly done by the purchaser. The benefit of this is, that it dramatically cuts down on the final cost of the modules. That being said, the downside is, I don't receive the benefits of the module manufacturer's quality control, and if I muck something up, I don't know enough about the individual components themselves to know what I did wrong. But learning as I go is all part of the fun! 😬
In any case, this type of incredibly detailed tutorial with close-ups _AND_ explanations of how soldering & soldering components work together *is priceless for newbies!*
Huge thumbs-up for this video! 👍
Sure, I am no beginner to soldering but I learned a lot of the "right way" to do it with this video and understand key things. Superb quality of video and voice, even if I am not a native english speaker, could understand straight even with the Aussie accent...
Great video, seriously. Watched the whole thing, learned some good info that I'll use in my work
1l
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Great example of the importance of flux at 13:05, it really does make soldering easier. Thanks for the video!
This is without a doubt, the best, most thorough and detailed soldering I have ever watched. It's the first one that explained why we need to do these various steps and not just "here's how".
Thank you for the great beginner's guide!
Inspite of the thousand dollars worth of equipment setting there you can do just as good a job with a hundred dollars worth and good close attention to detail. I did however learn several thousand dollars worth of good technique. Thank you sir.
Thank you this wonderfully detailed explanation of soldering technique. Didn’t know so many things can go wrong. I have been doing most of them. 8:03
Agreed. This is by far the best one I’ve watched so far. It provides context and technical details that give you a better overall understanding than simply following a list of steps
Glad you commented that. I will spend the time to watch now
@@pzmurphy Agreed. The man's presentation skills are ace. One of the best vids I've seen on this subject yet.
You are a great teacher, not to mention using good light and camera angles so we can see what you’re doing. Well done!
Really great guide for beginners!
A small little tip when heating the heat-shrink is to heat and shrink the middle first (where you wielded the wires), then move to one side and then cross to the other side.
The reason is that if you start shrinking on one side then go to the other side, you can create a small air bubble around the area where you wielded the wires together. If you heat the heat-shrink's middle part first and then go toward the ends of the heat-shrink, any potential air bubble that could form within the small gaps will have room to leave on both still opened side of the heat-shrink and as you shrink toward 1 end, the air will be forced out and then going toward the other end will leave the heat-shrink with no chance for any air gap.
This trick does comes with the potential of heating the middle too much so it requires a bit of practice and timing, but it raise the durability of the repair further.
ok
Sir, you're the kind of teacher we would want to have on any topic. Things are well explained and I have not seen the time past, thanks a lot
He is the best. I'm new to Comments on UA-cam so I didn't know where to tell him how amazing a teacher he is - I think my comment is in "About". Bruce, you are excellent.
Why, so you can fall asleep?
I'm a science engineer at a local highschool. I teach practical skills for biology, like how to use a microscope, to our students. I really enjoy your way of explaining and especially appreciate the work you've put in to share and show the details with us to support your lesson/guide like for example using the microscope to show the flux. In my opinion these things really make a difference. I'm new to your channel and this is my first video but i'm definitely going to have a look at your other videos to see if I find some more interesting topics there and of course I'll sub to your channel.
Thank you!
i lost my dad a year ago and he was just like you, i watch your videos to cope with my pain. my mum now has serious cancer and your videos make me forget about all my issues and depresion.
I know I'm late to the party with this comment but only recently found this and just wanted to thank you for the effort you have put into this and wanted to say that it's cleared up alot of things that I still wonder about, despite countless hours of reading up on it and your presentation is flawless. Keep up the good work!
Just got myself an iron - what a great guide.
Thanks!
After watching someone else's atrocious "How To" solder video, UA-cam brought me here to this video. What a pleasure to watch and learn from. Good job.
You just gave me the info I needed. I've been told over and over to put solder on the tip first and not to worry about the flux if the solder has flux core. I end up cleaning the tip constantly, only to dirty it up again just as quickly. I also changed my tip to a bevel and turned my heat up. I have a huge smile on my face having properly repaired my guitar pedal board! Thank you for the information!
I’m just trying to learn enough to repair old video game stuff but now I’m gonna watch part 2 because it’s interesting! Great video! Thanks for the help!
Came here from learning how to mod my old consoles, now I'm here leaning this. My old xbox is gonna run great haha
When I thought I knew what I was doing….. this just upped my soldering skills quite a bit. Very informative and actually showing how it’s done helps us hands on learners. No matter how old the video may be. It’s a good watch.
I'm just trying to get in to soldering. Thanks for putting this video together. This is 33 minutes of amazing information and instruction. The close-ups with the microscope really add the level of detail I was looking for. The best part is that I'm able to immediately apply the information shared here to my own projects!
I’m 55 and can do a lot of construction and fairly handy. I never knew these important bits of info and soldering was always very ugly. This was an awesome instructional video. I think I’ll be a soldering fool in no time now. Great video. Great breakdown. The microscope was perfect. Thank you so much
Thank you!
This is incredible, the best soldering tutorial I have seen. So informational and had all of my attention for the full half hour. Recently started upgrading toy cars to RC race cars and was really struggling with the soldering.
Wow! thank you so much your video was so awesome. I don't have to watch 10 videos to understand the beautiful knowledge you shared. I will be watching your next video. Also, you saved me from a car wire repair mistake. I feel full as if I had a bowl with food. Delicious 😋 😆
Your detail explanation and illustrations was easy to digest.
Thanks again great video!!!
I've never done any of this,
so my learning curve is straight up.
This video helps a lot. Thank you.
You know a good youtube video is when you are fed with good info don't see any jump cuts and those flashy focus effects and you still finish to watch from beginning to end. People, this is a real youtuber we are witnessing just like the OG youtube days. Oh wait it's a 30mins video. Thanks for sharing your knowledge sir.
This video shows so many things that other 'beginners' guides assume you already know. Absolutely brilliant, thanks a lot!
Thanks for the zoomed tutorial, most UA-camrs do not show them this close for us to know how to do it properly.
Brilliant tutorial on how to solder. One point I want to make that you did not cover in your lesson. I will cover it here. The process of coating parts you are going to solder is called "Tinning" It helps the solder adhere to other parts. One important step is to also tin the tip of your soldering iron. This helps in transferring heat to the part you are soldering. You don't' need to use very much solder to tin your iron. Just enough to make is silver looking.
One other tip. The part in the video where two wires are soldered together. This joint is called a Union splice. A way to make a union splice even stronger, is to twist the two pieces of wire together, in parallel before soldering. Don't twist them like a pig tail (that is a different type of splice) When you twist the wires together. A union splice is one of the strongest and most common splices you will make when working with electronics.
I know this has been around four years, but man...hats off. FANTASTIC job of describing what, why and how. So good.
Excellent teaching. You started from the very foundation and worked your way up to the basics highlighting the importance of good technique. Very much appreciated.
The Flux example was my biggest help. I kept seeing vids that just used without explanation and I thank you!
I came for a bit of revision and watched the whole thing. Very well done detailed guide!
I purchased a soldering kit a year ago and got so lost and created more questions than answers. This video blew my mind. Thank you so much.
When I was taught to solder as an apprentice in the early seventies, we would always wet the tip with a little solder before applying it to the work this aids heat transfer, allowing a faster job, less chance to melt the insulation or damage components through heat transfer, we were marked down for melting the insulation, and obviously dry joints.
I never once thought about doing soldering until I saw this video. Thank you. Now I will upgrade myself. I'm no longer just a software developer. I'm now a repairman!
The amount of detail in this was amazing; the pace is much appreciated. UA-cam's player has a speed settings for a reason, and videos that allow for this much extra detail makes me happy to have more control over how much I want to soak in.
A great video - without jumpy cuts or gabbling instructions that make most ‘how-to‘ vids for beginners useless - a clear, calm, skilful teacher. And everything in focus! Thank you!
So glad i took pause & watched your tutorial on soldering. While I've been soldering wires together on vehicles for years there's been countless times where i wasn't all that sincerely satisfied with the overall end result/resistance. WOW!!! The difference between soldering on electronic components & joining a couple of auto wires together is taught on 2 totally different levels. After having watched your Soldering Tutorial i can most assurredly state that my previous soldering methodology is history.
Anyways in all earnestness i Thank You Very Much for totally upping the overall quality of all my future soldering efforts.
I'd yack more but i need to run out & acquire a tin of that Rosin Paste Flux before i forget what its called. Heck, i wasn't even aware that solder had the stuff inside it nor all the differences between the types of solder previously i just grabbed whatever was convenient or happened to cost the least. Nor have i ever thought to solder the end of the wires prior to actually soldering the 2 together.
No doubt my days of scratching my head & wondering where those pesky missing Ohms went off to are now well behind me. THANKS AGAIN!
Sir, you are a great straight forward and methodical teacher who knows how to captivate and maintain the attention to your work...Your way of teaching so much reminds me of my 7th grade Math teacher...
Best beginners vid I've seen on UA-cam. Cheers mate.
That example of joining two wires without any mechanical coupling is astounding! If that wire is never subjected to any mechanical load or flexing, you will probably get away with it. If, however, it is a conductor subject to motion or flexing, it isn’t very hard to rip the joint apart if all that is carrying the strain is just the solder.
i really like that you took a store bought one for the demo since that is what a lot of us beginners will use
I watched the whole 30minutes....it's a rare gift you have (the ability to teach). I've had a soldering iron for 30 years and can now solder.
Mr. Branchus, thanks very much for making this video. Out of the plethoras of videos I’ve watched yours covered everything I was interested in learning. I’m 56 and getting ready to build my first fpv quad racing drone. I’ve got all my equipment including my now necessary wearable magnifying glasses and some 63/37 rosin core solder. I’m a little nervous, but I guess I’ll find out soon enough if I can solder or not. Thanks again for making this very helpful video.
I'd like to know how that went for ya.🤓
This is the first video on " how to solder" that has taught me anything. Great job! Thank you!
This makes me wish I had gone to school for this kind of thing.
Wonderfully done lessons, I've been watching people solder for a couple years online, but you broke down basics that I had never heard of. Fundamentals, if you will.
Thank you for taking the time to make this. I'm so excited to get started.
Very best beginners guide -i have been trying and failing to solder for two bloody years and I just couldn't do it! This dude made me UNDERSTAND what soldering actually does! One day! And I can solder! Thanks so much! Your a gem!
Thank you!
Brilliant, I came here for part 2 but I'm heading back to part 2 now , thank you for the clear easy to follow instructions and the work you put in editing and setting the cameras up and the rest , great work 👍
New to soldering. Just have memories of my Dad's rather rough technique back in the 1960's.
Excellent presentation of info and technique. Thank you.
Lead takes a much higher temperature to burn. Lead is NOT in solder fumes. That’s the flux. Lead free is better for the environment but you’re not “breathing in lead” if you’re soldering with lead solder.
Great video, I just thought I’d point that out.
Didn't I mention that in the video? I'm pretty sure I did. Or maybe I mentioned it in the part 2 video?
@@BranchusCreations Not that I heard in this one, maybe I missed it but at 10:00 you talk about lead solder being poisonous so ensure you have plenty of ventilation. That’s why I mentioned what I did in case people were nervous due to being a hobbyist, thinking they’re going to get lead poisoning because they fix something every 12 months.
Very professional sir. I am very surprised this video doesn't have millions of views. This is the best tutorial on soldering I've seen on UA-cam so far. Bravo.
OH how i wish this, you, existed back when I was tweaking around with my RC car as a kid.
Just want to say I got the basics down but still hearing your voice explaining everything is just so soothing I still play it when I'm doing my little projects thank you sir
Fantastic video production, excellent camera angles, very well explained with lots of detail. Thank you!!
You just repaired the RCM in my car. Ive been stranded for days.
Seriously, easy learning under stress.
Very good teacher. Like he was over my shoulder correcting my mistakes LIVE. Next thing I know im back on the road. Try sleeping in a Crossfire....for 4 days and realize you are a Hero to me friend!
I've been soldering for 15 years with many imperfections in the auto-industry. Your video helped clear up some of my mistakes, I'm sure I will improve my techniques from now :)
When you started and pronounced Solder with the "L" I thought I am happy to watch this. Brilliant tutorial. Thank you
Thank you for the soldering tips, I'm a beginner and it's made a massive improvement to my joins thank you
i'm 4min in, and already amazed by your thoroughness and ability to present. you, sir, are wonderful.
Thank you for this excellent video! This was incredibly informative for me, even though I'm old and built countless Heathkits "back in the day". I was recently helping one of my kids add a Bluetooth board into an early-gen iPod, and ran across this for training. I'm going to send him the link.
Very informative, Thanks for explaining it in easier terms.
Should've watched this before i did my soldering....
Same... I ruined a $100 walkie talkie because of a screw-up 😑
Me too!!
yeah me too
Glad I stopped
Thank you so much. I used to build Heath kits with my dad. Now at 64 I'm repairing home appliances, "solar light, etc," for neighbors and forgot how to solder. Your mention of temperatures help along with flux.
Thank you Branchus Creations for taking the time to present and upload such a useful and comprehensive video. It’s very much appreciated.
I knew ALL of those techniques, BUT... he instantly comes off as some who knows they've mastered their field, yet humble enough to focus more towards teaching ppl WHY the process should be followed, so I was instantly hooked & I learned a few "whys". Great stuff 👍definitely worth a like & a follow.
Fantastic job ! I needed to learn the basics for a school projet and your video was just perfect. It is so satisfying to see those neat joints on the circuit board. Big thank you from Belgium.
I've soldered before but I've never done it properly. I just muddled through.
With your simply explained teachings, I opened up a new soldering station that I bought a while ago and I was able to transfer the information you shared directly to a project I wanted to do.
Great stuff and thank you.
Great tutorial mate. You have quite a talent for teaching in a very effective way. Best soldering video I've seen, enjoyed every minute of it
Excellent Vid for Beginners and Old Timers will suffer NO harm from revisiting the Basics. I am an OLD (80yrs) time and have a nice soldering station BUT I soooo appreciate your demonstrating with the inexpensive Model as it is easy to become convinced that its ALL about the Fancy equipment and NOT the technique! WELL DONE! Thank you
Thank you so much for this. For years I have attempted to repair things by soldering and although I achieved some success the results were always clumsy and crude. This video showed where I had been going wrong in the clearest way. Looking forward to trying out the techniques in my next DIY project! 😄
30 years of amateur soldering frustration sorted in half an hour, probably should have googled long ago ha ha ha. You my friend are a legend! Thank you.
Such a great video. You explained it really well! Loved the demonstrations on what and what no to do. I did my first soldering before I watched your video and I tried to bridge two pads together and made a mess! haha. I also burnt some pads (they look black and I can not put solder there anymore) and had to jump the connections to fix it. Anyway, Thanks for the video mate!
such a comprehensive and detailed explanation of soldering, I dare say this is the best video on soldering on youtube.
thank you very helpfull .. im a beginner and trying to learn every day..
Just saying, like everyone else, this video is perfect. I was trying to fix my speedometer chips for the gear mode on my chevy 04 dash, and i needed this video. Got the facts straight, and the examples of detail helped so much.. i appreciate it, even if i replied 4 years later
Fantastic! You sir, are a teacher that also knows how to solder.
Always had problem while soldering. Small thing to do but did not know the basics and no body to teach. Thanks for dedicating so much time on the subject educating.
Of course I just watched this after soldering lol. I saw the person apply solder to the tip of his iron and then put that bead on the tip of his iron to the wire on the PCB.
Glad you showed me that isn't the way. Wish I knew that a little bit ago lol but I'm glad I know now. Do you recommend using the tiniest bit of flux when soldering to a board if you have the time? Like there's no harm is there?
Also, I always worry that preheating the component/board/ even wire sometimes will damage it haha. How do I know if im applying too much heat beforehand?
Either ways, super informative video. Surprised I watched the whole 30 min and it went by quick! You explained well. And the clear microscope shots were a *huge* help! (Of course as qwll as the demonstrations). But not a lot of people use microscopes and I feel its very helpful.
The fact that you also used a cheaper solder iron to do this was amazing. The problem with a lot of tutorials is that they're using high end gear and the typical person watching a how-to video is new to the hobby and won't have the same gear. So that was a wonderful idea.
Also, not to keep going on- but props to saying either pronunciation is correct! I feel the same way, too many people get up in arms over which is the correct way. The word pronunciation evolved differently in different areas; big deal. Lol.
All in all, TOP NOTCH video. Firm handshakes all around 🤝 Seriously, good work, and quality video.
This guy is the Bob Ross of soldering... and a nice little happy blob of solder here.. ohhh see how nice that is? Man, I could watch this dude all day. What a great video, definitely going to try some of these tips on the next soldering job.
Loved it !
learned a lot
Great camera work/angles!
Thank you
Very well shown. As a novice I greatly needed someone's help with how to solder. I have been trying to solder wire together and to a circuit board with very poor results, in fact you would say the worst you've seen. This has helped tremendously so thankyou very much.
Well done !!!! Now for a video using your quick hot air station :)
Amazing video. I have tried many times to solder the simplest items and never really got the feel for it. Right after watching I dug out the old cheapo kit and wired up a light fixture. Guess what? It worked. The detail and time taken are much appreciated.
Thanks for taking the time to do this. Informative and immediately practical!
Thank you. From the beginning to end I learned every step of the way. I’m carpenter and can do plumbing yet this is a whole new experience.
So many other videos start off like they’re for beginners and end either talking to us we’re pros that understand or they go off the rails and you just can’t stop watching because you know they’re going grab the hot end any sec and don’t want to miss it. Lol
Again Thank you and I hope you have lots of videos because I think you’d make a great teacher and you seem to have wealth of knowledge to share.
25:17 I would probably try and remove the sharp pointy bit on the left (shiny bit) of the top wire where it is most likely where the soldering iron left off leaving a sharp point which could penetrate the heatshrink. Good Vid though!
Thanks for the straightforward no-fancy equipiment talk. Really enjoyed learning. Cheers!
I came to find out what temp to set the station. I stayed for the flux importance.
Absolutely fantastic! I learned more in half an hour than in 5 years of getting by and ruining tips and pads on my FPV quadcopter’s electronics I bought flux last week and my soldering results are 100 times better! Now I know why and how flux works! Thank you 🙏
Wonderful tutorial. Very clear and informative. Thank you for your effort. :)
This is such an extremely vivid and detailed account of soldering. The concept seems simple, yet I found myself yearning for a more detailed explanation. Thanks
If all teachers were like this...
Thank you. Soldering has always been the biggest missing skill in my technical skillset, but this made me feel so much more comfortable in learning how to do it.
Incredibly informative, thank you!
One of my favorite videos on UA-cam. Super informative and very opinionated, this video will save you YEARS of mistakes. Thanks much! Recommend the rest of the series
Thank you sincerely for the cram course, this was significantly helpful.
New to soldering, trying to save money by repairing my aftermarket android head unit on my car with an exploded capacitor with electrolyte fluid everywhere. My dad was a genius but he passed so now i must learn myself. This video is very informative so i thank you for it. I'm going to try and repair retro gaming consoles after i repair my stereo head unit as my knowledge expands. Again thank you mate.
I'm watching this so I can build my own bass guitar
have you got it done?
You're a king. I'm a total beginner and this was a great thorough guide!