a beginners setup for electronic work?

  • Thread starter Thread starter jasonbmerrill
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jasonbmerrill

jasonbmerrill

the end of unreality
hello :D

as i posted in my thread here:

https://homerecording.com/bbs/showthread.php?t=276811

i am apparently going to do this replacement sooner than later. not only that, i think it would be beneficial to learn this "art" a bit more -- that is, being able to read schematics, replace stuff on PCB's, do good soldering jobs, wiring, etc...

i have ONLY a crappy soldering iron.

I suppose i will need:

a radioshack soldering iron for light-medium duty
a wire stripper
desoldering tool
different solders?
some wire for doing guitar wiring
snips to get the resistors off
different tips (pencil?)
maybe some common resistor types?



what else might i need?

i want budget stuff, i only plan on replacing my own stuff, what about an "Electronics for dummies" book or something?

thanks :)
 
I designed and built 1,000 microphones before I upgraded from the following:

http://www.parts-express.com/pe/showdetl.cfm?Partnumber=372-120

http://www.parts-express.com/pe/showdetl.cfm?Partnumber=372-202

http://www.radioshack.com/product/index.jsp?productId=2103174

Add to that angle clippers, wire strippers from 12 - 28 gauge, electrician's pliers, small needlenose pliers, small screwdriver set, razor knife, a step drill bit or two, a set of twist bits, a hand drill (I use a drill press), and a couple of small files, one round one triangle, and that's pretty much still the kit I use.

DeOxit, Faderlube, and Flux Cleaner are pretty handy to have around as well . . .

I still use this because I can't find anything better (and believe me, I want something better):

http://www.parts-express.com/pe/showdetl.cfm?Partnumber=360-670

My problem is I need to reorient my work very often, and my PCBs are extremely small, so the Panavise stuff just doesn't suit me well. I need the Alligator Clips of Doom, but nobody seems to make those. I chew through the Helping Hands in about two months, so I have to replace it constantly :(

What else . . . a punch is nice, along with a fretting hammer I got from Stew-Mac. Kinda clever for random electronic tasks, with the plastic face (it has brass on the other side). I love their fret cutters, much nicer than the cutters at the local hardware store. I cut all kinds of stuff with that.

Tin snips are great for cutting PCBs :) Actually, I see what I use is called "left cut aviation snips". Those are great!

I like the pickup wire from Allparts, it's good for lots of stuff. As for solder, I am strictly lead-free, so if I have to do leaded rework, I use my old iron for that (so as not to contaminate the production kit), but I'll still use lead-free solder. The only thing I use leaded solder for anymore is repairing organ pipes, because the temps required for lead-free solder will melt the pipe!

I would not buy a multi-value resistor pack, because you end up with lots of values you never use. I have standardized on these values for my own projects:

15
47
150
330
620
1500
3300
5600
10K
33K
100K
1M
10M

Nothing special about those, they just work for me. Those are the standard wattage, for something like power supplies I would buy special values just for that project.

Given that resistors in quantity of 200 are generally less than $0.05 each, I would just buy the value you need for whatever project in 200, and soon you'll have plenty of leftovers for a full range of values. Keep in mind that most resistor values in a schematic are not critical, so usually you can use something within 10% or even 20% with no big difference. And you can always series or parallel two resistors to get a lot of different values.
 
i plan on spending around 100 bucks the next paycheck i get, prolly in 2 weeks or so...

this seems to fit the bill nicely.

thank you for your suggestions.

what is the benefit of lead free? Is there a health hazard? Im not going to be eating off of it or anything ;) fumes?
 
i plan on spending around 100 bucks the next paycheck i get, prolly in 2 weeks or so...

this seems to fit the bill nicely.

thank you for your suggestions.

what is the benefit of lead free? Is there a health hazard? Im not going to be eating off of it or anything ;) fumes?

It's required for European export. Other than that, the fumes are mostly organic from the flux, it's an irritant and maybe carcinogenic. That's why I go with no-clean, much less smoke that way, plus of course the no-clean benefit. But I imagine there might be some lead in the fumes of leaded solder.

Either way, silver solder (usually less than 4% silver) is much nicer for electronics work, just seems to flow better. I think most lead-free solders have some silver.
 
I've been using silver solder. It doesn't taste as good as lead solder, but it does work well for conductivity and stuff.

You'll probably want a multimeter. Since you're new like me, be sure to get an "autoranging digital" multimeter. I don't know what drives the cost on these, but some get really expensive. Mine was $30 or $40 at Fry's I think, and I think the brand is Extech. I'll check the model number when I get home. Some time ago, I bought a traditional (manual ranging) analog multimeter, and I never used it, because i couldn't understand how to operate it :o - I think I could probably do it now, but the other one is much more convenient and easy, I think.
 
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