sissysphoto
Member
Attached is a photo of a Nikon finder I'm working on. I didn't take the photo, it came off the internet. But for purposes of this post it could have been a million small electronics I've worked on. You know the story. Move the parts around too much and the wire breaks off at the solder joints. And my eternal irritation begins. Strip off 3/16 or so of insulation, twist the ends and solder. But it won't solder. And the more you try, the more the wire rejects the solder. So instead I tin the end of the wire, but it won't tin. no amount of heat will make the wire take the solder. I've always attributed it to the wire being old and oxidized. Or perhaps it's something I never knew or learned. This business of spending hours trying to get the wire to attach to the circuit board even by a strand has got to stop. Is there something I don't know? Thank you.