shadockan, I never said I was into assembling packs profesionally. Doing it with this solder and technique can be relatively fast, yet I believe this is more adequate for custom builds and high current, as I can use and solder very big wires with ease.
Iāll just stick with the LiitoKalaās thenā¦ much cheaper & real good.
I tried my best to send you some of those connectors so you would have them when you needed them. :person_facepalming:
But no ship to address was I given.
Good day BLFers. Currently I have 2 26650 protected cells for my stock L6. I need 2 more. Can I use non protected 26650 cells? The black Liitokala seems good price, but not protected. Will my stock L6 circuitry can function as protector? Noob question. Thanks :innocent:
I think itās best to add the solder blob just to increase their total length. With my solder blobbed Liitokalas the springs on each end only compress a little. If I give the light a small bump on the front bezel (making the batteries slide forward) it will cut power for a second. Iām talking about a very slight bump.
So I may make the blobs a big taller or else make a spacer. I need a flat plastic disc (about the size of a poker chip) and maybe a copper or brass cylinder about 10mm diameter and maybe 5mm thick. Iād cut a hole in the plastic disc and press the metal piece inside. The plastic piece will hold the metal center in place and prevent it from touching the walls. It seems pretty easy, but I havenāt done it yet.
The extra tension might even boost the power just a little. Who knows? Lol
Slayer 1ā¦ā¦ I just put them in the light and see if they work. Change them around from front to back position because there is no rhyme or reason to it.
Of the 18 I have, 10 of them will work in series just fine. I mark the ones that do so I do not have to check each time.
I wish I had something super scientific to tell youā¦ but it is just trial & error.
Hey Jason, my series connector has not arrived yet. Can you direct me which cheap solder machine I should buy? So I can learn how to solder blop. Thanks.
I used the velleman vtss5u $26 from Frys for years. Itās a decent low cost unit. The 3 oāclock knob position is for small stuff and all the way to 5 oāclock is for bigger things like heavy wire and adding solder blobs to batteries.
I recently upgraded to a 995d soldering station. $85 on Amazon plus a 4 year warranty for $8 more. I donāt know if you want to spend that kind of money.
Youāll need 60/40 rosin core soldering wire. I got 2 small tubes of .032 diameter for $10 on ebay.
Flux is the key to good soldering. I would get a flux pen SRA #312 $8 on amazon. A dab of this on every connection before soldering makes for great results.
Keeping the tip of the iron clean is also important. Damp sponges can pull too much heat out, I like those brass shaving types of tip cleaners. I got mine for about $8.
This style of āhelping handsā is also good to have. I use it a lot. Robot or human?
I also tend to use a Boruit headlight $9 to help me see what Iām doing.
Then the best thing is to watch YouTube videos on soldering to get a feel for it. Then practice yourself. It takes a little practice to get good. This guy Louis Rossmann - YouTube has a lot of videos using a microscope to show his soldering. He uses a thick flux paste, unlike the pen I recommended earlier, but the concept is the same.
So for around $50 to $60, you can solder like a pro, almost. Lol