Review: Seeed Studio Miniature Soldering Iron
October 03, 2019
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The Chinese company Seeed Studio offers a lot of interesting things for electronics enthusiasts. Along with selling products from various manufacturers, Seeed develops and produces their own products, many of which are very innovative. For instance, a year ago we had a close look at the DSO Nano V3 miniature oscilloscope.
Seeed has also developed their own miniature soldering iron, which is now available in a European version. The unique thing about this soldering iron is that a display and the control circuitry are integrated into the grip. From the photos and Seeed’s description, it looked like a good idea for us to get our hands on one and try it out in the Elektor Labs.
Along with the soldering iron and the associated tip and AC power adapter, the box contains a power cable, a grounding wire with a clip’, an Allen wrench and some spare tips.
The miniature soldering iron is compact (16.8 x 1.65 cm) and looks more like a fat fountain pen than a soldering iron. The grip is made from plastic with a sturdy feel. A small OLED display and two pushbuttons are located on the side of the grip (or is it the top?). The tip slides into the front of the grip and is secured by tightening a small screw with the included Allen wrench. At the rear of the grip there is a power connector and a micro-USB connector for connection to a PC.
The soldering iron has a rated power of 40 W with the included AC power adapter. You can optionally connect a higher-capacity power supply (max. 24 V). That boosts the power to 65 W.
Seeed has also developed their own miniature soldering iron, which is now available in a European version. The unique thing about this soldering iron is that a display and the control circuitry are integrated into the grip. From the photos and Seeed’s description, it looked like a good idea for us to get our hands on one and try it out in the Elektor Labs.
Along with the soldering iron and the associated tip and AC power adapter, the box contains a power cable, a grounding wire with a clip’, an Allen wrench and some spare tips.
The miniature soldering iron is compact (16.8 x 1.65 cm) and looks more like a fat fountain pen than a soldering iron. The grip is made from plastic with a sturdy feel. A small OLED display and two pushbuttons are located on the side of the grip (or is it the top?). The tip slides into the front of the grip and is secured by tightening a small screw with the included Allen wrench. At the rear of the grip there is a power connector and a micro-USB connector for connection to a PC.
The soldering iron has a rated power of 40 W with the included AC power adapter. You can optionally connect a higher-capacity power supply (max. 24 V). That boosts the power to 65 W.
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Discussion (5 comments)
TODD KREIN 8 years ago
There are two things I wish they would change about them, however, to make them perfect:
1) Add a way to turn the heat off immediately. I'm usually debugging something when I'm using it, so I put it down a lot. Given how quickly it heats up, and how tail-heavy it is with the power cord, I want to know it's off.
2) find a way to store the allen wrench in the body. I have to take it apart for travel, so it doesn't break in half, and I'm always losing that wrench.
Austin Day 6 years ago
Pressing both buttons to turn off was a bit counter-intuitive, but it works.
Wish it came with a metal stand - the demonstrator resting it on the wire wool made me smile. There are TS100 3D printed stands on Thingiverse.
Also, the optional earth cable is a bit of a nuisance - could it be integrated in the PSU cable?
TODD KREIN 6 years ago
Adrian Blake 6 years ago
Juan Rial 5 years ago