Utter tripe.
He claims to be an electronic engineer. He plugged a 110V appliance designed for a different market region into an Australian 240V socket, which obviously was not wired up properly, otherwise the MCB would have tripped within 30 ms of the short developing. And if it had somehow shorted live, or even neutral, to the double insulated chassis, and there also was some sort of earth path, possibly through the operator, the RCD would also have tripped within 30 milliseconds (that’s a lot of ifs, in a row).
Both of which are far far faster than a fuse. These timings are set to minimise the chance of electrocution, you’d have to be quite unlucky to be killed by, or even notice a 30ms belt, but it still could happen.
All that drama about ripping out the lead from the back and chucking the smouldering wreckage into a box is nonsense. Unless he seriously had not a clue about how to wire up the mains in his shack, to regulations, and really genuinely managed to fry it by mistake, and idiocy.
Soldering really is simple stuff, no need to over-analyse, start simply, and practice. Materials and the tools are readily available. Don’t over-analyse this, pretty much anything that you can get your hands on, borrow, even steal, will work. Just get started, and learn.
By the way, it seems AUS wiring is very odd, to more sophisticated eyes. See discussion such as Changing plugs, No Fuses????? - Page 5 - British Expats for example.
As I said before, in the UK we still have fuses in our plugs, because of a legacy of dangerous 30A ring mains and consumer units containing fuses made with replaceable fuse wire, no MCBs, and no RCDs. That’s still what I have, and my house is only 30 years old. Good as new, not changing it until I’m forced to.
(that was irony by the way, not sure there is an emoticon for that)
Possibly we are the only ones left still doing so (and our ex-colonies)
If all that changed overnight there would be no need for fuses in plugs, or anywhere else.
A fuse is a very poor thing to place any trust in, when it comes to electrical safety. And embedding one inside an appliance, not easily user-replaceable or source-able generally creates much more nuisance than any theoretical benefit.
Necessary on multi meters and other such equipment that can be seriously abused by ignorance or simple error. But, my goodness they are expensive, the proper ones. That work, in the blink of an eye. To replace the fuse on my Fluke I could almost buy a complete equally capable UNI-T for similar money for example. With much the same fuse inside.
But needed on a soldering iron ? No I don’t think so. Turn it on, it gets hot (hopefully). Don’t leave it un-attended, unless you absolutely trust it. Even then, just don’t because you will oxidise the coating on the tip within minutes. A decent one will be ready to go in less than a minute from a cold start.
Bells and whistles by all means, but you can also waste a lot of time twiddling knobs and looking at displays, even seeking reassurance from random online forum people who you don’t know, instead of just learning how to solder intuitively. Practice makes perfect, there is no substitute, it is a skill. Some get it right away, others take time, the majority just can’t do it properly. Which, by the way can also be tested, and I’ve done a bit of that, as examiner.
Like welding, or paint spraying, or …