The Smell of Molten Projects in the Morning

Ed Nisley's Blog: Shop notes, electronics, firmware, machinery, 3D printing, laser cuttery, and curiosities. Contents: 100% human thinking, 0% AI slop.

The New Hotness

  • Hakko FX-888 Soldering Iron Pilot Light

    The Hakko FX-888 soldering iron perched on the corner of my bench has a little red LED that lights up when it’s heating and goes off when it’s not. Unfortunately, while shutting down after fixing something, I sometimes glance at the thing while the LED is off, whereupon it will patiently keep the iron hot, sometimes for days, until I return.

    A recent Squidwrench session gave me the opportunity to yoink that nuisance off the to-do pile where it has been pending since about ten minutes after I unboxed the iron a decade ago.

    Some concerted rummaging failed to turn up the stash of bridge rectifiers, so I air-wired one from a quartet of discrete diodes:

    Hakko 888 Soldering Iron pilot - bridge rectifier
    Hakko 888 Soldering Iron pilot – bridge rectifier

    Remember: the bigger the blob, the better the job.

    For the record, the transformer produces 28 VAC, with the center tap 26 VAC from the left end and 2 VAC from the right end.

    A 10 kΩ resistor stands upright at the far corner of the bridge, limiting the LED current to a few milliamps and making it bright enough for the purpose.

    The front of the case has plenty of vacant space in its upper corners, so I drilled a hole and poked a blue LED:

    Hakko 888 Soldering Iron pilot - heating
    Hakko 888 Soldering Iron pilot – heating

    That’s shown with the iron heating.

    Here’s an action shot with the temperature at the setpoint:

    Hakko 888 Soldering Iron pilot - stable
    Hakko 888 Soldering Iron pilot – stable

    Nowadays all soldering irons have digital readouts with no need for a pilot light.

    Of course, two days later I found the bridge rectifier stash, but there’s no point in opening the patient again.