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Margery Conner Technical Editor Margery Conner's PowerSource streams the latest developments in electronic power design and related technologies. Follow Margery on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/margeryc.



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Monday, August 10, 2009

Demo: Soldering an HB LED to its aluminum substrate/heatsink with a heat gun

Aug 10 2009 9:43AM | Permalink |Comments (2) |


Here’s a nice video from Steve Dahl of Digikey showing how you can use a heat gun to solder high-brightness LEDs to an aluminum substrate heat sink. In the demo he uses a Steinel programmable heat gun set at 620°F (these sell for about $300), and dabs on the solder paste with a needle/syringe applicator. After applying the heat and showing how some of the solder blobs out, he flicks the excess solder off, leaving a very clean-looking joint. (He also emphasizes that this is not following any LED manufacturer’s spec, and is for lab/prototyping purposes only.)

If you like hands-on demos of LED technology and applications, plan to attend EDN’s next Designing with LEDs Workshop in the Chicago area on October 6, which, by the way, you can now register for. We had some great papers and panel discussion at our inaugural event last April which we’ll be building on for the Chicago Workshop.

 

 [Via Adafruit.]


Related entries in: Components, Hardware, Interconnect | LED | Power Sources/Controllers | 


Reader Comments



at 8/10/2009 11:51:19 PM, Mare said:
I suggesgt using some tools for placing the LED to avoid touching the lens with your fingers.



at 8/11/2009 4:41:03 PM, William Ketel said:
I can certainly see why there are all of the disclaimers! BUT it looks like it works, and if it really is that quick, then it is a neat trick. I would like to see some of the other units soldered.

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