Lead free solder - exposed in a UK national newspaper

Lead is an element, it is composed of lead and can't decompose. It is so soluble that water pipes and roofs are made out of it......

Reply to
nospam
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Ditto. I have half a pound right here that I bought at a hamfest in the eighties. Used it to put together a Wersi Delta years back, used it for other kits and copious repairs. Even waste a ridiculous amount tinning my soldering tips (the current one is from the seventies and helped with the Delta).

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                   Chelsea Clinton Criticizes Bush in N.C.

                         Talk about "dog bites man"...
Reply to
clifto

We 'fools' learnt plenty Don. Which is why most people in the UK don't consider themselves part of Europe, and never will. If you know anything at all about the UK, you will know that we are a free democracy. Free, that is, to be controlled by a government that has now been in too long, and thinks that it is a dictatorship. You may have seen on your news - because from what I've seen on your TV when I've been there, just occasionally, the TV companies do look up on a map wherabouts the UK is, and carry the odd interest piece - that our wonderful leader Brown (are you aware it's not Blair any more ?) has just signed up to a new European Treaty that we had already rejected, along with a couple of other countries. They said it was different, but all they had actually done, was rename it. Despite promising the country a referendum on the original treaty, Brown then reneged on that, contending that it was not the same treaty that they had promised to ask us whether we wanted ...

You just cannot fight that sort of thing, so whilst we learnt, and understand all about it, we have little option now but to be swept along in Euro-hysteria, and comply with all the nonsense self justifying crap that comes across to us from Brussels :-\\

So speaks a British victim ...

Arfa

Reply to
Arfa Daily

On Apr 3, 7:13=A0pm, exray wrote: > snipped-for-privacy@yahoo.com wrote: >

Heavens no. I don't fight. I just try to state facts to the best of my knowledge with as little embellishment as I can. I don't know about your soldering tools but we now use only Metcal soldering stations at work besides my personal one at home. Point is a Metcal has a very well defined temperature not likely to vaporize solder - though what tool would?

Tried a very small amount of lead free solder, didn't like how it behaved and then set it aside to keep using leaded solder until I can't get it anymore. The antique stuff I work on has leaded solder so it seems proper to repair it with the same type solder

Oddly, using lead free solder on copper pipe was kind of fun in that the solder had a very well defined melt point that seemed to almost instantly flow. IIRC it was 95% tin, 5% antimony.

GG

Reply to
stratus46

Try tin/silver, *no* copper. Nice shiny (sexy looking?) surfaces, easy to solder, have seen no problems in 2 years where circuits get a lot of temperature cycling.

Reply to
Robert Baer

Indeed, some experts recommend this, saying that mixing leaded and lead-free in the same joint, reduces the potential integrity of that joint

Arfa

Reply to
Arfa Daily

My usual supplier was doing small samples of just about every type that he carried. I'll have a look and see if he still is. What's the melting temperature of that mix, and what's the price like ?

Arfa

Reply to
Arfa Daily

All this being obviously true, it is inconceivable that the ROHS thing has been done out of sheer stupidity - noone is that stupid, even though those in high offices routinely want to look that in order to be left alone. I can think of no plausible explanation for this ROHS madness other than a well planned and executed sabotage action agaist the countries which have (and rely on) an electronics industry. At a scale that large, even the most expensive to bribe officials cost peanuts.

Dimiter

------------------------------------------------------ Dimiter Popoff Transgalactic Instruments

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Reply to
Didi

By this I meant that if it's deeper than groundwater, there's a nearly zero chance of it getting into the water, or being a problem in any other way.

Also, I had run into some information about lead toxicity several years ago that said that naturally-occurring lead compounds are not as much a problem as artificial (industrial) ones, because living beings are evolved to handle the "organic" (I think it was orthophosphate, but am not sure) form of lead, and can more easily flush it out of the body, preventing bioaccumulation. I tried just now to find that info again, but couldn't. :(

Lead is an element, it is a toxic element, and it can react chemcially to make toxic compounds. It can corrode when exposed to water, and the corrosion by-products are soluble enough that lead found in drinking water comes mostly from the lead in pipes and solder used to hold the pipes together.

References:

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I went to the EPA site and did a search on "lead" because it became clear to me from previous discussion here that I really didn't know enough about lead toxicity to write at my usual level of knowledge. As I've said, I know more about other, more toxic, heavy metals, and lead has not been of big concern to me.

What I read at the EPA's site confirmed that there isn't much cause for concern with regards to the lead in solder. They say that although there is cause for concern, lead doesn't have as great a bioaccumulation factor as other heavy metals. And they didn't say anything at all about electronic solder or people who work with it, so it looks like those who said they got blood tests that showed no problem are justified to feel they are ok. (If it were me, and maybe it is, I'd still get the test done that uses a hair sample, just to make sure.)

Most of the fuss in the past was about lead-based paint and lead from car exhaust. Both of those have been phased out. (Although recently there have been problems with lead paint being used on toys made in China.)

The EPA hardly mentioned solder at all. As far as I could find, only with regards to water pipe and tin cans (where it is also no longer used).

Looks like I was right about the lead smelting operations, though. And wouldn't you know it, most of that is done in the general region of the planet in which I live (SW USA). By far, most of the lead in use is for car batteries, so I don't see any need to give up leaded solder just for that.

In the Wikipedia article for "solder", it is said that smoke from solder flux can contain a little lead oxide, and that the flux smoke itself can be toxic. So I'll be a little more careful to have good ventilation while soldering. Pretty simple!

Although the EPA noted that metallic lead does corrode, resulting in toxic soluble compounds, they didn't say anywhere (at least that I could find) that lead in landfills is considered a significant problem, and there was no mention of danger from tossing used electronics in the trash.

Jay Ts

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Reply to
Jay Ts

I don't think that I would say that it has been done out of "sheer stupidity" - more out of misinformed madness. My feeling is that once lead had been determined to be a potential health hazard, as it probably was when lead compounds were added to petrol as anti-knock agents, then all uses of the material became automatically 'demonised', irrespective of whether any threat from them was real, or imagined. The ecobollocks that I have referred to elsewhere in this thread, has reached the point of unjustified hysteria amongst both the politicos and, worryingly, the scientific establishment, who should know better.

Governments rely heavily on so-called scientific advisors, but it seems to me that many of these are receiving commercial grants from government, and will tell them whatever they want to hear. Much of the current ecohysteria that is reported in the press, is based on very dubious science, that in my day, would have been thrown out of school for poor methodology. I, and most others in the electronic service industry, simply do not believe that lead in solder represents any threat to health, or the environment at all, and I personally have seen no persuasive evidence from any quarter to convince me otherwise.

I think that lead based solder is just an unfortunate victim of someone's over-enthusiastic approach to anything containing lead, and the whole RoHS thing has just swept it along with itself, without those who caused it in the first place, understanding the full implications of just what they've done. Apart from anything else, just consider how much extra power is being used every day world wide, to run all of the production solder baths and hand soldering tools, 30 or 40 degrees hotter than was needed for lead-based solder ... Eco-friendly, or what ...?

Arfa

Reply to
Arfa Daily

Unless, of course, it's a CFL full of nasty mercury compounds ... d;~}

Arfa

Reply to
Arfa Daily

--
In my opinion, this brouhaha about the elimination of lead in solder
has been brought about by Europe\'s (led by the UK, of course) trying
to bend everyone to their will, once again, (empire dies hard) with
the UK leading the charge by claiming that all lead based solders are
evil.

Idiots die hard.

JF
Reply to
John Fields

when

referred

my

most

I

me

being

lead-based

I recently went to a lecture by Jim Thurston, Medical Engineering and Physics, King's College Hospital, London; mainly about hormesis and background to the polonium murder of Litvinenko in London.

But at the end I asked for an explanation of something that has always evaded me. Why some incinerator plants are licensed to incinerate low level radioactive waste , as it gives the impression that you can rid radioactive material be incineration, compared to landfill.

The answer, from that government scientific advisor, was along the lines that a lot of it is for the purpose of incinerating biological hazard material that is also radioctive. Then it is a matter of distributing the plume of radioctive outfall , from the smoke/gases, over as wide an area as possible, of adjascent communnities. It is some sort of ststistical exercise. Too much radiation per Kg then it cannot be allowed to be dumped but if the radioctive component from that Kg is distributed over some (unspecified) large area of land surface then that is permitted.

-- Diverse Devices, Southampton, England electronic hints and repair briefs , schematics/manuals list on

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Reply to
N_Cook

I would not know about integtrity, but the MP of the mix is a *lot* lower than lead-free (solder).

Reply to
Robert Baer

MP of Sn96.5 Ag3.5 is 430F/221C.

Reply to
Robert Baer

So that about says it, doesn't it ? 'Official' government advice from someone that you would expect better of, based on what you would have to say was at best, 'dubious science' !! It defies belief, but goes a long way towards explaining to 'eco-believers' why things such as lead-free solder, are actually nonsense ...

Arfa

Arfa

Reply to
Arfa Daily

You clearly know nothing at all of Europe or its politics. If you seriously believe that the UK is responsible for bringing about ANY Europe-wide legislation, you are very seriously deluded. All Eurobollocks is driven by the likes of France and Germany, and our emasculated government just roll over at every opportunity, and follow like sheep. Do you actually know anything of the British Empire's history ? It was not about bending people's political will. It was about having a world united in friendship and trade. Admittedly, it was about ensuring that the trade was to our global advantage, but overall, the world was a better and more peaceful place back in those days. Now, we have 'superpowers' like the US, who want every country in the world to become another US state, with the same language, political views, religion, consumer and oil driven economies and so on. And you accuse US of trying to bend wills ? Sheesh.

Arfa

Reply to
Arfa Daily

I assume you're being hyperbolic for humorous effect. But there is only a tiny amount of mercury in a fluorescent tube.

Reply to
William Sommerwerck

Not only that, but it is pure metallic form Mercury, not some dangerous compound(s).

A very small amount.... In the big, long tubes. An even smaller amount in a desktop CFL.

Reply to
Hattori Hanzo
[snip...snip...]

Brings to mind the old saying: The solution to pollution is dilution. Thus, we now have oceanic dead zones off the coasts.

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Rich Webb     Norfolk, VA
Reply to
Rich Webb

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