Thought I might try and put something back into the forum after all the help I've received on it.
So, despite years of soldering copper pipe (not every day obviously but perhaps every year or so), I've always struggled. Until now. My current project has involved a fair amount of soldering and whilst my joints are definitely not pretty, I'm a lot more confident in them first time and I don't need to use Yorkshires anymore.
So what changed?
Well in all the countless descriptions of how it should be done and many videos showing it done I've never really understood one thing. I watched pros expertly move their torch around and darting in and out with the solder but whenever I did it I often ended up with globs of solder dripping on the pipe and not much going in the gap where it should go. I think I somehow thought I had to heat the gap with the solder on it all at the same time. Often in the videos the solder would be in the flame....
In case anyone out there has the dangerous combination of enjoying plumbing but having little in the common sense department like I do then the following might just help. Cleaning and fluxing is easy to copy but I didn't realise that the fundamental idea is to heat the pipe/fitting and then let the pipe/fitting heat the solder!! So by keeping the pipe/fitting at above metling point the solder literally flows in as it should do.
I know in retrospect all the guides out there probably do make that point but its one point among dozens and I never realised it. So now I know when soldering I need to get the pipe/fitting hot enough to melt the solder but not too hot so when it starts flowing I take away the flame - I can always add it again if it cools down too much. But the main thing I didn't realise was the pipe/fitting itself should be hot enough to melt the solder when they touch. The flame is only to get the pipe/fitting to temperature.
I hope that helps someone else even though I'm sure to many it sounds like stating the bleeding obvious.
So, despite years of soldering copper pipe (not every day obviously but perhaps every year or so), I've always struggled. Until now. My current project has involved a fair amount of soldering and whilst my joints are definitely not pretty, I'm a lot more confident in them first time and I don't need to use Yorkshires anymore.
So what changed?
Well in all the countless descriptions of how it should be done and many videos showing it done I've never really understood one thing. I watched pros expertly move their torch around and darting in and out with the solder but whenever I did it I often ended up with globs of solder dripping on the pipe and not much going in the gap where it should go. I think I somehow thought I had to heat the gap with the solder on it all at the same time. Often in the videos the solder would be in the flame....
In case anyone out there has the dangerous combination of enjoying plumbing but having little in the common sense department like I do then the following might just help. Cleaning and fluxing is easy to copy but I didn't realise that the fundamental idea is to heat the pipe/fitting and then let the pipe/fitting heat the solder!! So by keeping the pipe/fitting at above metling point the solder literally flows in as it should do.
I know in retrospect all the guides out there probably do make that point but its one point among dozens and I never realised it. So now I know when soldering I need to get the pipe/fitting hot enough to melt the solder but not too hot so when it starts flowing I take away the flame - I can always add it again if it cools down too much. But the main thing I didn't realise was the pipe/fitting itself should be hot enough to melt the solder when they touch. The flame is only to get the pipe/fitting to temperature.
I hope that helps someone else even though I'm sure to many it sounds like stating the bleeding obvious.