I really enjoy kit building I find it to be a nice pass time when the propagation is not co-operative and the bands are slow. With kit building it's a learning curve starting out with basic kits and moving up to kits that
contain SMT components....I have yet to dive into that pond. There sure is a reward when you have spent time
Replacing a cable |
Recently I had to open up my Elecraft K2 to add an internal antenna tuner and battery. I had not had the top off the K2 for some time.....I was amazed at all the components to which I thought..."I actually put all this together" For those of you who build kits like me you have run into times when things just don't go as planned. I have soldered components in the wrong place. There has been solder run onto two pads instead of the one the solder was intended for and so on. I would bet there are a lot of kit builders out there who have their own stories. As kit builders we all have our "tools" from soldering stations to multimeter's
Hakko at work |
The finished product |
2 comments:
Thanks for this tip Mike, looks very handy! I usually use de-soldering braid when I make one of those blobby mistakes with mixed results. Until just recently I haven't had a soldering iron that is suitable for the increasingly tiny components and pads on kits these days, but now that I do I may have to add the 808 to the tool set.
Good afternoon Casey, yes the 808 sure does make short work of repair or replacing. I noticed the other night while testing my Elecraft KAT2 there was a resistor I instaled but was not supposed to until one test was done. It's no problem to remove this resistor in a snap do the test then solder it back in place.
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