I’ve seen some reviews and it goes from ambient to 350C in less than 5 seconds and the temperature dips very little during soldering. This allows for very high quality solder joints and prevents overheating of components.
Also there’s a metric boatload of different tips available for every conceivable application.
Looks really fancy. The question is, do you need to shell out the bucks for a soldering station with such features? What kind of work are you doing? If it’s professional MIL-SPEC stuff, then sure, but if you’re just a hobbyist it’s way overkill.
I’m also a Weller guy. They seem to be the dominant maker.
We use a mix of fixed and adjustable irons at work and they hold up really well(er!) despite people leaving them on unused for hours and days at a time.
I bought a used WESD51 for personal use a couple years ago and I like it fine. New, these are $150ish, I think I paid $40 or so.
I can’t really imagine spending $500 on a solder station, though.
The only use for that kind of thing might be if you were having quality issues even after all the other variables (such as operator skill) are taken into account. If you were at that point, you wouldn’t be asking about it here.
I am not in Germany, but another country that uses 220V. I wonder why they don’t use a multi-tap transformer with a voltage selector and instead they have three separate models for each voltage.
I think I will go on and buy it. I love the way the tips change and the tip availability, although their price is a bit steep.
Seems a little gadgety to me. Also seems like it may be a bit delicate and won’t hold up very well to long term use. I’m going to second (or third) the recommendation for a decent Weller if you are going to be forking out that kind of money.
FWIW, I’ve been using this cheapo soldering station for decades, and it works great.
Note that I’m a professional, and that I use this to do medium-scale production with it, so it gets a LOT more use than just a “hobbyist” would give it.
I do have several other specialized irons, including an enormous one for soldering lugs, and a tiny Antex for soldering SMT devices under a microscope
@Dog80, the soldering station that mentioned in your post is a good one which could be used for many years. It is a little expensive though but since I don’t know what materials are being used to manufacture this, I guess it’ll be made up of better quality steel and high-boiling point plastic. There are soldering stations starting from $50 in the market but they don’t have very long lives. My suggestion is go for a similar model of Weller in the same price range…