I like using liquid flux and got tired of dipping a toothpick in a tiny bottle and then dropping a bit on the joint to be soldered, so I bought a Hakko liquid flux pen. Problem is that I'm not sure how to load/use it. It is the 4 ml model and consists of a thin plastic body, a removable internal tube of some sort, and the cap which has the little paint brush applicator and a cover for the tip that has a pocket clip. I have a largeish bottle of liquid flux and a 3 ml syringe to fill it with, but the questions are:
Do I fill it with the inner tube in place, or with it out.
If out, do you put the inner tube in after the flux is in and then gently squeeze the pen body? If so, what happens when you can't squeeze the pen enough to get all the flux at the bottom to fill the inside tube, or do you just invert the whole thing to fill the inner tube?
I'm sure this is going to be a real time saver, and there will be no tiny bottles of flux to knock over and make a nice mess.
BTW, if you've never tried liquid flux, it works really well on OCC wire as well as other typically harder to solder metals, plus you can apply it in places where it would be difficult to apply a paste flux. Of course, most of the solders we use have flux in them, but often that is just not enough -- at least for me.
Any. help greatly appreciated,
Jim
Jim Rebman -- recovering audiophile
Equitech balanced power; uRendu, USB processor -> Musette DAC -> 5670 tube buffer -> Finale Audio F138 FFX -> Cain and Cain Abbys near-field).
s.e.x. 2.1 under construction. Want list: Stereomour II
All ICs homemade (speaker and power next)