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another "what is this?" post

OSAO

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I have seen the wood handle with copper tip over the years, I feel like I should know what these are..

Anyway, what are these tools?

GALLERY]
 
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premierplayer

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Soldering irons, generally heated with a charcoal fired Brazier. Most common uses were copper gutter/downspout/roof flashings, also galvanized sheet metal work, and early automotive body and fender work.
 

Kirbot

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Soldering irons, generally heated with a charcoal fired Brazier. Most common uses were copper gutter/downspout/roof flashings, also galvanized sheet metal work, and early automotive body and fender work.

Yup, that was another way to heat them.
I imagine the charcoal furnace or Brazier was generally used in a factory setting, while they were more likely to be heated with a blowtorch in a smaller shop.
 

csp

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We used these in junior high school shop class (early 1980s) heated in a natural gas fired Brazier for sheetmetal projects.

Nobody teaches how to use these properly any more.
 

Theloniousmonk

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Yeah, I've used a few of those to put in lead body filler.

uncle used to do the leading thing when I was a wee tot... he still has a bunch of spatulas and various shaped irons... a nearly dead art now, i've seen a few companies offering leading alternatives in the last few years, but have not heard of anything recently.

and now you kids know where the term "lead sled" came from...
 
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nw2571

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Stephenw

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Here is the really old school way to heat those soldering irons...

They were heated in a miniature pot belly stove. Note the iron on the bench.
 

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RM209

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Those little pots are still used to heat the soldering irons, But they're rarely used due to the expense of copper gutters. However, full service roofing suppliers still stock lump (wood) charcoal for those pots.

RM209

Here is the really old school way to heat those soldering irons...

They were heated in a miniature pot belly stove. Note the iron on the bench.
 

Lump

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I still have several of the old soldering irons here. I used them at work as a sheet metal worker on occasion. They used to be used much more often in older days, but with the advent of modern welding equipment which works so well on thin metal, the need is reduced to copper and brass. We little natural gas furnaces, which were designed for the job. But you had to constantly wash down the contact surfaces of your work piece with acid, and when you hit that acid with the iron, you QUICKLY learned to avoid breathing the smoky fumes which rose from the iron! And then you melted the lead/tin alloy solder, which added more toxic fumes. And then you added more and more and more acid, to keep everything "clean" for good solder joints. It would take days to get that sour acid taste out of your mouth and nasal passages. And if you got too many heavy whiffs of that acid smoke, your lungs would react with violent pain, and you had to go outdoors and catch your breath for a few minutes. When it got better...you went right back to work. After a long day of soldering joints, the copper or brass rivets in your blue jeans would be corroded green, any plated steel zippers, rivets, etc in your clothes would start to rust, leaving stains on your skin on the inside, where you perspired against them.

So... Anyone wondering why soldering and body lead work is becoming a "lost art"?
 
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