Soldering wires to a star, a little differently? - Video

Neat trick !

I don't really have the bandwidth to watch many videos. From what I gather of the comments, it sounds like you are flattening a thick wire (tin, flatten, bend). Great idea. Will definitely need to try to keep that idea in mind.

Great video!

I am using a small piece of flat copper sheet stock about .012" thick and butting the wire up against it, so that only the thickness of the sheet is on top of the star.

So after being skeptical this was any better than my nickel band method I went ahead and tried this on my EagleEye X6 yesterday night and it worked great. Its sort of different methods for different applications, not really competing methods to do the same thing, this way wouldn’t work if the holes in the HS wern’t spaced ~16-20mm apart but in lights like that of works great.

Thanks for the new technique O-L!

Wonderful, just wonderful.

I think you've mentioned it before, but now it makes more sense with the video.

I am going to try it as well.

Thanks.

Thanks OL, very instructive. I’ve used copper tabs for some time, tinning all the joints in advance really speeds up the process and avoids overheating the LED or driver components.

Great solution of an annoying problem.

Thanks for taking the time to show this.

John.

Where would you acquire a thin sheet of copper from?

O-L wrote:

I am using a small piece of flat copper sheet stock about .012" thick and butting the wire up against it, so that only the thickness of the sheet is on top of the star.

Ah, very good idea. Thank you.

I was logged in when I searched so it may not work for you, just type “xxGa copper sheet” in eBay in whatever gauge you need.

Edit: I always buy my raw material’s (such as copper sheeting/rounds) from Etsy

+1 Etsy is where I get my copper sheet. For thicker stuff, I just flatten out copper couplings.

Wow - I gotta try this. I usually solder the wires on the LED last and keep the wires the shortest length possible. So my method, you have to de-solder the LED wires first to remove the driver. I think using this method, you must have enough play in the wires to solder the driver connections with the MCPCB mounted already, then have to have enough pill space to fit the extra length of coiled wire. Not sure how you can do this in many pills with 18 AWG wire. Think I'd like to see a part 2, showing the driver being soldered and how it all fits/assembles together.

But this O-L method is a hugh benefit for HD2010's, because basically you can't have any bump up on the connections, specially if you de-dome. I'll have to try this.

Great idea! Thanks for sharing :slight_smile:

I missed this first time around. I will try this on the mystery light as the mystery light is a HD2010. Can you use brass instead of copper? I have some 10 though brass shim.

Fantastic solution. Will definitely be using this in the near future. I have had this problem so many times. I can also see how on a larger light you could bend the copper too. That way you could come at it from the side instead of underneath.

Thanks for sharing this is going to be a huge help!

back a great trick of the FlashlightPope :heart_eyes:

maybe for one dedome xpg2 on the k50 v2 :wink:

I wonder if a solid wire could be pounded flat on the end and shaped to fit. Say maybe a 20 guage copper wire (do these get made with a silicone jacket?) then pound the end flat, fold to fit and solder once.

Probably could. There’s several ways to make a flat contact wire. Stranded wire could be forced flat, if flattening it while the solder on it was still soft.