A word on soldering and fume extraction

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 29 มี.ค. 2016
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ความคิดเห็น • 628

  • @rossmanngroup
    @rossmanngroup  6 ปีที่แล้ว +48

    Thank you to everyone who made a purchase on eBay via our affiliate link at rossmanngroup.com/ebay for helping support this type of content. Your viewership is appreciated and as always, I hope you learned something!

    • @grantrennie
      @grantrennie 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Louis Rossmann I know this is an old video, it looks like that filter is taking out some of the city traffic fumes as well which is good.

    • @1121494
      @1121494 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      So what's your thought on lead free solder?

    • @TwinShards
      @TwinShards 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      I just compare *The fume* generated from soldering with a cigarette... it's slowly going to kill your lugs over time.
      Which is bad.
      Yes i know... i reply over 1year later. But better later than never lol.

    • @jamest4198
      @jamest4198 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Do the desktop fume irrigators work almost as well as the larger floor units?

  • @DJHMrSquirrel1
    @DJHMrSquirrel1 8 ปีที่แล้ว +227

    Guys he is right get an extractor. My dad is a plumber and uses flux to solder pipes together and after 30 years of that - as he has no extractor or protection for his lungs - he breathes like he smoked. So guys please don't be like him get an extractor.

    • @rossmanngroup
      @rossmanngroup  8 ปีที่แล้ว +50

      +DJHMrSquirrel1 That sucks. :(

    • @DurzoBlunts
      @DurzoBlunts 6 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Mitchell wodach different amounts by large comparison. Plumbing solder is usually much larger than the 1mm solder wire smd hobbiests use. Louis' flux globs are magnified. Take it from Big Clive who has been doing this for decades...

    • @jonathanwieringa8808
      @jonathanwieringa8808 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      My grandfather has been soldering for 50 years almost everyday without extractor. He also smokes, which doesn't help him. He is now 70% blind and can't breath properly without sounding like a ran a marathon while having a cold.

    • @deoxal7947
      @deoxal7947 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      What is in the fumes being extracted? My doctor said flux is animal fat and if it were causing issues, it would make me cough or feel bad in some way but I never have. And smoking will make you cough way before 30 years. That being said I still plan to get one just in case.
      I also got a lead test and my levels were barely measurable. I read that most lead absorption comes from ingestion not inhalation and I always wash my hands after and usually wear nitrile gloves while soldering.

    • @jasoncatlyn7331
      @jasoncatlyn7331 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Will do, thanks for sharing.

  • @pepsijazz462
    @pepsijazz462 5 ปีที่แล้ว +45

    Just a note: the circle of grey stuff doesn't come from the solder and flux, it's just dust. The discoloration, on the other hand, comes from the solder and flux fumes. None the less, it is important to get a fume extractor.

  • @400tenchu
    @400tenchu 8 ปีที่แล้ว +85

    When I did repair in the Army. They took this very seriously. In-fact, they would have extractors built overhead into the ceiling. They have to pay for work related disabilities so it shows how serious the damage can be when the Army spends the most money on fume extraction.

  • @Si1983h
    @Si1983h 8 ปีที่แล้ว +48

    I started playing with/learning electronics as a kid and quickly learned that I needed some kind of extraction, I'm asthmatic and even small amounts of soldering got at my chest, I made an extractor with a cheap fan and some cooking extractor filter, it worked to an extent and you could see the crap building up on the filter paper. At 16 I started working in an electronics factory and saw the crap in my filter in my Metcal extractor and realised how much my home made extractor wasn't filtering... I brought a Metcal extractor as soon as I began working for myself and always use it,even for a quick, 1 minute job, it wasn't cheap (about £600 or $900) but it was well worth it. There is nothing at all macho about fucking up your health.

    • @obfuscated3090
      @obfuscated3090 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      If you exhaust your fumes outdoors you can use any KW fan you prefer without filtration. "Bounce house" centrifugal blowers move serious air so I use those to ventilate my welding room in my shipping container shop.

  • @FortyTwo6x7
    @FortyTwo6x7 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    A boss that actually takes Health and Safety at work seriously and does what is right because they want people to finish work as healthy as they started their shift then leads from the front and not only makes sure his place of work is safe but tells the world what to do on youtube ! that is a new one on me. Louis, you often talk about "cleaning up your part of the world", this right here is how its done !

  • @TheRcEngineer
    @TheRcEngineer 6 ปีที่แล้ว +21

    In Austria you have to use fume extraction our repair guys workplace gets checked randomly about once a year by an health inspector and when there would be no fume extractor they would close down the whole office.

    • @sdj7122
      @sdj7122 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Do you work in Tridonic or Lighting (Zumtobel Group) in Austria ?

  • @coltonowens2742
    @coltonowens2742 8 ปีที่แล้ว +93

    As a guy who's slowly learning to solder, I was not aware this was an issue. I'll have to figure something out.

    • @koolkat214
      @koolkat214 8 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      You can get the Hakko Fa 400. It's only $90 and will get the job done for you.

    • @kittythe5750
      @kittythe5750 8 ปีที่แล้ว +19

      set up an inline fan out the window with some ducting. tape /seal off the extra parts of the window so your don't get fumes blowing back...ide guess like 25 bucks at homedepot. done ;)
      broke man's gotta solder

    • @jacobrau990
      @jacobrau990 8 ปีที่แล้ว +28

      To be honest I don't think this is an issue for a hobbyist. A half hour a month of solder fumes doesn't seem like a big deal. But I am 100 percent onboard with proper PPE and fume extraction if you're doing this with any level of regularity.

    • @ArsyadKamili
      @ArsyadKamili 7 ปีที่แล้ว +19

      +Jacob Rau
      I'm a 'hobbyist' learnist kind, I choose electronics for my future.
      And I solder like 7H a week.
      This video kinda wakes me up real bad. I'm saving my money now.

    • @OpenGL4ever
      @OpenGL4ever 7 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      The cheapest way to get a very good protection is just by buying a real half facepiece respirator mask and wearing that while soldering. I do this as a hobbyist. New filters do cost only about 12 €.
      Of course a fume extraction device is better, because it also cleans the room, while i have to open all the windows and leave the room after the work is done, but a respirator mask is better than nothing and much more versatile.
      The half facepiece respirator mask does only cost you 22 € and will be usable for years.

  • @_215Juice
    @_215Juice 7 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Lou, you are such an inspiration man. I watch your videos every day. I feel like you GET people like us. You teach very valuable lessons in EVERY video and in different ways. I pray you never stop keeping people like us in line. Thank you.

  • @pmdsp
    @pmdsp 7 ปีที่แล้ว +105

    I completely agree with you, there is nothing more important than the health. Health is the only wealth. Its simple as why some people choose not to smoke.

    • @rossmanngroup
      @rossmanngroup  7 ปีที่แล้ว +16

      Yes!!

    • @kaziulaz
      @kaziulaz 7 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      soo if its that "disgusting ..shit".. why you dont look like that all the time ? www.flickr.com/photos/148198851@N02/32396182513/ :D:P ..(.... dont read next text if you dont have anythink beter to do.. i supose nothing more what someone dont write before) .....i can give to you hunderts of this mask for free ..they just need some shiping from Poland. you will be more healty :D......ok ok i get you point i just.. :P i my self hate all fumes and even at work undergroud some times in 10-20x than max alowable levels dont know how many more dust than outside and im near one people that using mask near all that time with some excludings. there are even some peoples that dont want put mask on when dont see own hand by that many dust in "air" and they like some testosterone gorila say stupid things that by he meaning put me in position that im some freak stupid idiot...... in that situations i think ex.: why he just dont make suicide or he never clean at home hehe what he talk to he wife when she cleanig ? Back to video: regular air all around us is ...... "this ..shit what is go inside you body" go there even when you not solder and will be just sit.. read book or doing nothing .... you breath little less this "shit... some of is stop on filter... but i dont think you not using some dust mask only for good looking (yy i know you use air conditioner but he grab some to) or run some vacumm cleaner 24/7/365 like that he will grap in that normal conditions without moving from one place a few kilograms of "this shit" and you not will be need take "this inside you body" and you will be fastest on 4miles etc. (personaly i use not all time but i have make some "fumes smoke snake eater" made from many connected old vacum cleaner flex pipes and hair dryer's suck air outside home) ......

    • @caradu9973
      @caradu9973 6 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Kazimierz Różański please rephrase in simple speak

    • @bbaovanc
      @bbaovanc 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Kazimierz Różański just had a stroke

    • @Cbd_7ohm
      @Cbd_7ohm 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@bbaovanc lol

  • @Ramekenas
    @Ramekenas 8 ปีที่แล้ว +43

    It's a nice comparison ,but most of that black stuff is normal dust , I think what you should show is that the used filter is yellowish from the rosin fumes, as for fume extractors , usually the cheap thin carbon filter don't really do the job, like your filter ,the best way is to buy a shower fan and a hose and blow it out the window

    • @Gameboygenius
      @Gameboygenius 8 ปีที่แล้ว +20

      Indeed. Most of the stuff caught in the pre-filter is regular dust: lint and dead skin. It looks yucky but found in every home, and is mostly harmless and comes out with a cough. That's what the pre-filter is there for, to make sure the later filter stages don't clog up. That does *not* invalidate the need for fume extraction and filtering obviously, but the nasty stuff mostly comes in the form of ultrafine particles or solubles.

    • @ggman1254
      @ggman1254 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Get quadcopter motors, they are so just so strong , but consume about 150watts.

    • @joeking433
      @joeking433 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yeah, that's what I was thinking. I have some of those air purifiers that operate on the same principle, a fan, a filter, and a pre-filter, and the pre-filter always looks scummed up like Louis's pre-filter just from household dust and such. Or you can look at your furnace filter and see how quickly it gets filled. I don't know what smoke would look like on a pre-filter, maybe like the filter of a cigarette I guess.

  • @lillydoye7418
    @lillydoye7418 8 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    Thank you, I now feel slightly proud of my fume extractor. It isn't exactly top of the line, but I think it was worth buying now that I have started to solder more often.

    • @rossmanngroup
      @rossmanngroup  8 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      +Samuel Doye You don't need top of the line, just as long as you are thinking about it and put effort in to not inhale that crap. I bought the FA-430 because it was worth it to not deal with wasting time researching what to buy when I had a stack of stuff to do, and I know if I buy something made by Hakko(besides the FM-206) it will work. But it doesn't mean everyone has to spend that much on their own setup.

  • @gabegarcia6425
    @gabegarcia6425 6 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I wish my dad would listen to your advice. I've tried talking to him about the importance of ventilation and limiting exposure to smoke/chemicals but he has this old school mindset that none of that stuff matters.

  • @imcmart6037
    @imcmart6037 6 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    After watching this video I'm thinking back when i was learning to solder spending 5 minutes breathing in lead smoke and burning my fingers to solder 2 wires together. Very eye opening. I solder electronics for model cars.

  • @toly78
    @toly78 8 ปีที่แล้ว +59

    I have the same Hakko fume extractor. 2 hours heavy soldering in a small room and no sings of any flux smell. Don't be cheap, get one of these and save your lungs

    • @compactc9
      @compactc9 8 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      +toly78 So true, we aren't talking about something slightly irritating, or bad smelling. These fumes are POISON, and will damage your lungs in ways that may never heal. Its just as bad, if not worse than, cigarettes!

    • @gsuberland
      @gsuberland 8 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Yeah, anyone who has gotten flux in a small cut on their hands can tell you it doesn't feel great at all. Good indication that getting into your lung tissue is not fantastic either.

    • @mkppio
      @mkppio 6 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      It is way worse then smoking! Ask any lady that has worked at a radio factory in the old days, soldering all day long without a extractor or any thing to protect them. You doesnt know anyone that worked there? Well most have died with lungcancer...

    • @christopherweaver9543
      @christopherweaver9543 6 ปีที่แล้ว

      Hakko fume extractor is your new lungs

    • @maulerrw
      @maulerrw 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I'm assuming they use a HEPA main filter in the back?
      Do they have a carbon component as well as particle filter?

  • @iGamepc
    @iGamepc 8 ปีที่แล้ว +101

    Imagine all the people in Chinese factories who inhale these fumes daily with no filters.

    • @st0nedpenguin
      @st0nedpenguin 8 ปีที่แล้ว +42

      +TheAmmoniacal This. You can say a lot about Chinese production facilities but they're often better equipped than most small US operations.

    • @rossmanngroup
      @rossmanngroup  8 ปีที่แล้ว +41

      +Alex Brook This is sadly true.

    • @igorovmaior4919
      @igorovmaior4919 8 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      A FFU(fan filter unit) cost only about 150$ in China (that's just the retail price for single unit), it is an affordable investment. However, smaller factories in China get virtually no protection at all.

    • @mitchellwodach2215
      @mitchellwodach2215 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      OSHA

    • @nicholasroos3627
      @nicholasroos3627 6 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      OOHshit

  • @OpenGL4ever
    @OpenGL4ever 7 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    You are right.
    Once i asked in an internet forum about electronics a couple of years ago about the right filter type for a respirator mask to do soldering work. They laughed at me, but i knew in this case i am more smart than them, so i just called the company of the respirator mask directly and got an answer.
    I don't solder much in a year, but when i do it, i use always my half facepiece respirator mask when soldering.
    BTW. new filters costs me only about 12 €, but it's worth the money because my lungs are more important.

    • @maulerrw
      @maulerrw 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      To be fair you asked about a respirator mask, so yes that'd get a laugh as you dont want or need a mask for soldering.
      Ideally you remove the fumes before the get near your face. It sucks it away from a few inches from the iron.

    • @oizy1760
      @oizy1760 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@maulerrw Some protection is better than none.

  • @CondoreComputing
    @CondoreComputing 8 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    I dont solder enough to get a fume extractor, but that doesn't mean i dont take care to protect myself from it, i use a box fan near a window and solder near that to pull the fumes away.

    • @cyberp0et
      @cyberp0et 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      So do I.

  • @Duncandogg
    @Duncandogg 7 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Excellent, you are preaching to the choir but this is one of the many aspects of the electronics repair industry that doesn't get enough publicity!

  • @Korstre
    @Korstre 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Thanks for not trivializing the health risks associated with soldering. I've always wanted to get started so I can fix a whole bunch of broken retro hardware, but _this_ is the whole reason why I still haven't.

  • @rkan2
    @rkan2 8 ปีที่แล้ว +37

    The big stuff isn't really that unhealthy. The human body is able to excrete large and coarse particle. Nano-sized particles and sharp particles like asbestos however is a different matter. Also metallic fumes and anything else than carbon might give an unwanted result from the body..

    • @mitchellwodach2215
      @mitchellwodach2215 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      like silica

    • @FortyTwo6x7
      @FortyTwo6x7 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      have you ever ate a pizza ? In other news when I did a deep dive into the notion that saliva and nostril hair filter out particles over a certain size I found the basis of this theory came from a two day workshop held by the World Health Organisation on the ceramic industry, funded by companies making ceramic materials and the evidence was the companies said their employees were not worried about the dust. I did the research as I am a union health and safety representative of a large company and the company H&S Officer put forward this argument when I was compiling about dust from buffing. When I asked for a peer reviewed study that the body expels the larger particles he said he would get me one. At the next meeting he said "he would have it next month". I presented my findings and asked had he ever ate a hamburger because they are quite large. By the next meeting the job causing the dust had been moved to elsewhere with a extraction system, but he would still get me the study. That was two years ago, crickets

  • @Bandseli
    @Bandseli 7 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Wow! You surprise me when ever I watch your video of course positively!! You proved me that i am not crazy as so many others telling me! Continue as you are a nice guy!. Thanks Michael from Vienna Austria

  • @joshi3218
    @joshi3218 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    This is great. I occasionally solder but have been ignorant for a couple years. Thanks for being so vocal on the matter...glad this video popped up while searching for something else.

  • @albertsemelmann838
    @albertsemelmann838 7 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This is a very important message for all of us who enjoy soldering electronic kits. In fact I just paused the video and ordered a fume extractor online. I will wait for it to arrive before continuing my oscilloscope project. In the past I used a simple fan to pull the fumes away from my workbench and hopefully out the window. It helped a bit, but it was too noisy and often the windows were closed. So this video will be a beneficial word to the wise for all soldering enthusiasts. Good work. Now I will check out your vegetarian video!

  • @mortwilliams7371
    @mortwilliams7371 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Louis, loads of respect for you taking a solid line on health. The side effects of not using fume extraction are real and very bad. Specifically, the fumes from the burning rosin (resin, flux, whatever) are nasty. Some refer to occupational asthma or industrial asthma or other terms, but it is real and I live the effects of it after a lifetime in the industry. Many doctors palm it off as 'adult onset' asthma, but it is real. When I started as a 16 year old apprentice in the military, we did not use ventilation or fume extraction - safety was all about cleaning or protecting the work area, not our health! At least our militaries did eventually change that attitude and do care for their people now, but for me that was halfway through my career. The effects can be very long term and may not show up for 20+ years. Once the immune system becomes vulnerable through the long term fume exposure, it also preps the body to be less immune to other allergens. So essentially, the industrial asthma opens the way for me to have asthmatic reactions to other allergens! Please, please everybody, take the fume extraction seriously.

  • @treefroggy
    @treefroggy 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Wow. This is the most reasonable advice I've seen online in regards to the subject of soldering fumes. People get so defensive and downright hateful when you even imply that maybe you could be breathing in LEAD rather than just flux. So many soldering tutorials where dudes don't wear gloves. It's pretty sad. I've also seen adult men get soaked in led acid battery fluid all over their hands like no big deal. Every single molecule of lead that enters your bloodstream via your skin, lungs, mouth, or eyes will stay in your body FOREVER.
    I am also extremely poor, I make less thank 12k per year. I solder outdoors with a fan I got from goodwill sucking up the fumes right in front of my work. I also wear a soldering gas mask rated for lead filtering during extended work sessions, and I always wear latex gloves.

  • @tomwilkinson3336
    @tomwilkinson3336 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    This video 3 years on got me to buy a basic fume extraction system, i cant afford the 500 dollar one but the 50 dollar one online with a carbon filter will do a world of difference to fumes coming straight up into my face
    thankyou for this video

  • @markoletica2019
    @markoletica2019 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    This fume extractor was first thing that i have spotted when firstly watching your video and ofc started looking for one on ebay.

  • @djs5089
    @djs5089 8 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I am still using the hold-your-breath technique as a hobbyist. I ordered a nice USB powered desk fan of Ebay but it still hasen't arrived. I'll probably have to buy another one.

  • @pa4tim
    @pa4tim 8 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    You are so right, I did not have a fume extractor and started to get respiration related problems but I did not know the cause until I started looking your videos and you talked about fume extraction. I'm also in the independent repair business (but I do measurement and calibration gear)
    It was a bit difficult to make/find one in a way it is not giving problems. One like you have is no option, I'm surrounded by testgear and often the whole instrument that needs repair is on my desk. So I have to preposition it constant.
    I now have a commercial one that has a lamp-like swingarm I mounted on a metal bridge-like frame I made over my desk . It has a big but silent 230V fan and a carbon filter. It really makes a difference. (the Alu-frame is to guide f.i. testleads, support things against tipping over or mounting things for a test setup.)
    Fred

  • @streamdungeon5166
    @streamdungeon5166 6 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you for making me aware. I just bought one. You might have lengthened my life there... in 30 years I might think back and you could have been a life changer there :)

  • @jacobwcrosby
    @jacobwcrosby 7 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    *JESUS FUCKING CHRIST*!!! Thank you! Thank you so much good sir! Ugh, is this stuff so complicated for all of these people?! Just unbelievable. I am already screwed, I have cancer, asthma, kidney failure, and a plethora of tumors, so I could *easily* justify how it's pointless for me to use a fume extractor, and despite my current financial state of being, I still find it important to have built my own activated charcoal fume extractor. It's just unbelievable that people would put forth the thought and effort into justifying the ridiculous malarkey that you are calling out in this video! Once again, I really do greatly admire your 'no bullshit' approach to what is right. Most of the people that stand behind their perception of what is right do so passively, with the whole, "Ummm... Yeah, I um... I think that maybe people should probably always use a fume extractor, um, because even if they don't care, um.. Well... The people around them maybe, ummm, might not want the, ummm, odor, sort of, you know, having to smell the odor... Plus, all of the, ya know, purported health issues, I mean, they probably aren't true... ", and so on and so on, just passively trying make some weak ass argument instead of just saying, "Hey, get a soldering to iron, because that shit is bad for you, and if you work at home, your wife, your children, hell, even your fucking dog doesn't need that crap in their body man!"...
    My apologies for the rant, and for the probably weaving in and out of the lane of the topic at hand... I just wanted to thank you kindly for taking the path of integrity and just saying, without any possible gap for misunderstanding, to point out that which *YOU KNOW* to be right, without any semblance of doubt!
    Well done good sir, and good on you!
    Thank you once more! Be well!

    • @johnclark887
      @johnclark887 6 ปีที่แล้ว

      Stop your blasphemy of Jesus’ name. Cuss out Muhammad or other pagan gods.

  • @Aussie50InspiredDavidZ
    @Aussie50InspiredDavidZ 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Just got my fume extractor in the mail today after using a cheap hakko smoke absorber for a year. Finally saved up enough money for it. My lungs thank you Louis.

  • @xDevscom_EE
    @xDevscom_EE 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks for video, very good example on visualizing what happens if one don't care. Just got myself a fume extractor (similar to PACE 200) tonight for my homelab.

  • @845amg
    @845amg 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Fume extraction is essential for any work like this. I wish I had one when I used to do a lot of electrical work in cars. I always had a fan blowing it out. Now I have extraction in my home work shop for painting, laser cutting, dust, etc. extremely well worth the one time investment. It keeps the work area cleaner, saves your lungs, and helps you get more work done by staying healthier.

  • @ArsyadKamili
    @ArsyadKamili 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you, Louis, you're the best.

  • @myriamlebeau7002
    @myriamlebeau7002 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    We see more and more peoples trying to build some by theirself... I think your video made a real impact Louis!

  • @hibernaculum
    @hibernaculum 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    I've been using the hold breath/desk fan for years but was planning to build a cheap computer fan/tubing system soon. I dig your take on this issue Rossmann.

  • @KingOfKYA
    @KingOfKYA 8 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    Even one of thous cheapo Air filters on amazon would be good as long as it has a paper filter thats meant for "smoke"

    • @rossmanngroup
      @rossmanngroup  8 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      +KingOfKYA anything beats nothing

  • @PetetheNorwegian
    @PetetheNorwegian 6 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks for bringing this up! Very appreciated 👍

  • @Tribes11
    @Tribes11 6 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I want to begin soldering. I love this thing and everytime I'm watching videos about this, specially from Louis. Fumes were always a concern for me, I didn't even started it yet because I can't figure how to set up a system for this. Everytime I've soldered for hobby until now I've ended up with a headache. This is probably a simptom I don't want to have regularly if I really get into this business. So, since I live in Brazil, and in here everything is like third world country, and most of the electronical stores that works with solder doesn't even care about health, only about money making, I don't think we have good options for fume extraction...

    • @rossmanngroup
      @rossmanngroup  6 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      +Tribes11 window and a big fan!

  • @hardergamer
    @hardergamer 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Excellent video! I'm glad Dave said about you! I made my own years ago using a 12"x 22" carbon filter and fan from an indoors grow room! the ones they use to remove the smell when growing weed... So people saying it cost to much!! they are wrong as you can buy a grow room air scrubber kit for $20-$100+ from ebay etc... It may help to save your life!!

  • @cloudb3462
    @cloudb3462 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    Your advice is second to none.

  • @Sycoholic
    @Sycoholic 6 ปีที่แล้ว

    Wow! Great video!!! I never thought about that or knew. This is the video we definitely need!

  • @TheColinputer
    @TheColinputer 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    For my soldering i just bought a bit of MDF board. Screwed a 120mm high airflow PC fan to it and using some PVC pipe fittings attached a bit of small aircon duct to it. Then i stick the MDF board in my window and blow the fumes right outaide. Cost me all of about $20

  • @kasperverweij9424
    @kasperverweij9424 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    couldn't afford a good extractor, so i got a pc fan and some filters and made my own, i hung it above mt desk on the wires and it works pretty well for me. Thank you for encouraging me to think about my health, I've been breathing in this crap for too long.

  • @paulf1071
    @paulf1071 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Very important topic here. Thank's for taking the time to put it together. Please make a video about work-station ergonomics and sit-stand desks.

  • @membaker3998
    @membaker3998 8 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Mine actually just came in yesterday. You mentioned this a few months back and i was sold. Thanks +Louis Rossman

  • @SylwesterKogowski
    @SylwesterKogowski 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I went cheap, I have a regular air filtering system on one side of my soldering workplace, and also I have two small PC case fans on a small stand on the second side.
    That made a horizontal air flow from the fans directly through my whole workplace to the filtering system.
    Even though both the air filter and the fans are fairly low power (90W filter and 2x4W fans), the wind current is so strong, that I have to increase soldering temperature by 50 to 100 degrees to prevent it from cooling down my soldering tips and the solder joints before i finish the work.
    I think it is actually more convenient setup than those tunnels because you don't need this setup to be close to you, the air current is strong enough so that you can place them further away and still benefit from the filtering. The air current covers completely my work space, no need to set up anything, it makes a kind of a horizontal air curtain.
    The filter I bought used for 50€ (and changed all the filter parts of course), the fans are part of my own preheater that I designed by myself, they were for few €. When I put it on full power, I can even light a small camp fire on the workplace and not smell any smoke :P

  • @jonnyduke3763
    @jonnyduke3763 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I also use eye protection because one time while just reattaching a connection I had some sort of air bubble form I think and a small dot of molten solder was sent flying...it arced and hit me about one inch below my right eye. I stopped immediately and went to find my safety glasses I had buried in some other gear. That little dot of solder burned quite a bit but I was very thankful it only hit my cheek.

  • @AvocadoAtrocity
    @AvocadoAtrocity 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Excellent video. Thank you.

  • @hunzhurte
    @hunzhurte ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thank you for this video. A lot of things that had to be said here.

  • @MrPaddy1000111
    @MrPaddy1000111 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I have used the smaller desk fans with the carbon filter in them and they work, they are okay, at least better than nothing. I upgraded my set up and got an inline mains extractor fan unit (they are usually used in bathrooms and stuff) and some ducting. Ducting on the the desk to the fan, then from the fan to out the window. Direct, high volume extraction to outside. No fumes or anything in the room and no need for filters etc. Whole set up was like $40.

  • @Marie579
    @Marie579 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Hi Louis last night 18 sept i ended up in hospital as an emergency admission, where i was given a chest X-ray the doctor explained i had unexplained shadows on my lungs, which i guess would explain my slight breathlessness. I don't smoke, i live in the country but i do electronics repairs etc without a fume extractor.
    Silly me, THANK YOU.

  • @MCMinerHQ
    @MCMinerHQ 6 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I do a lot of soldering in my dorm room and I have a 3 layer carbon filter and some ducting as my home-made fume extractor. Also comes in handy for vaping without setting off the fire alarm ;)

  • @josephdestaubin7426
    @josephdestaubin7426 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    "I don't give two s**** of a f*** what everyone else is doing". As a business owner and wholesaler I've said that to so many customers over the years. In fact I've said those exact words quite a number of them. Bravo to you sir.

  • @PetterAstrom
    @PetterAstrom 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    Man, I wish I lived in NY so I could hand my MBP to you. Thumbs up for being intelligent in so many ways!

  • @imkawed
    @imkawed 8 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    hey,
    what you showing in the prefilter is just normal dust, that precisely what the prefilter do, filter the normal dust
    dot get me wrong, im totally with you with the fact that we have to do the max to not breath fumes
    i dont have a real fume extractor, but i do like you say: i have the one with a simple fan and carbon filter, i open the windows and catch my breath whan i see fumes lol

  • @ScottLee64
    @ScottLee64 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I've got a shop-vac that would work decently as a cheap solution for fume extraction. It has an inlet and outlet with a filter in the middle. Hook up a hose to both ends and run the outlet outside if you're worried about anything that makes it past the filter. Should work pretty well and was only about $30-50. Plus it can still be used as a vacuum.

  • @muppetpaster
    @muppetpaster 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks for the lecture....

  • @kitocco9827
    @kitocco9827 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I’ve only soldered like twice to replace some game cart batteries & try to start repairing my Genesis controller ports, and I had no idea this was a an issue, even with lead-free solder. And my preexisting asthma wouldn’t help either.
    One time when my mom was right all along. Even if I’m moving my soldering outside, I’m gonna look into a Hakko FA-400 filter. Or use that high power fan my dad has in his garage. Thanks for this vid, it’s been a month or 2 since I first soldered in my room and this just adds to why I should never do that ever again.

  • @leroybrown9873
    @leroybrown9873 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    I made my own solder sucker out of a 12v marine inline fan and flex dryer tubing. Sounds like a jet when it’s on high but the Fumes go outdoors far away.
    I also weld with flux core wire on galivanized steel outdoors with a huge shop fan and a respirator.
    PPE is your only hope! Never ever let some fool tell you different!

  • @carlangelo653
    @carlangelo653 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    I always wear a small mask when soldering. I also keep one or 2 fans on and open all of my windows. Something about inhaling any type of fume scares me. since a few of my relatives died of Lung Cancer. I think it's great that you spread awareness about it.

  • @Shawn_White
    @Shawn_White 8 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I'm using a Shop-Vac as a fume extractor, I simply hooked a hose to the exhaust port, ran it out the window and ran the intake hose in front of my work area. The whole thing only cost 60 bucks used at a yard sale and works phenomenally.

    • @obfuscated3090
      @obfuscated3090 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Shop vacs rock and don't need filters if exhausted outdoors. The polyethylene conical dust separators that fit atop any pail or drum you like are great for collecting machining chips from my lathe and mill so if you want to keep crap out of your vacuum check those out. I use the ancient trick of panty hose over the filters to greatly extend their life (by several years in my cases).

  • @KarlUKmidlands
    @KarlUKmidlands 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    I made my own extractor with flexible ducting that goes out the Window, connected to a fan on my desk, very cost effective as no filters to change

  • @robertc7682
    @robertc7682 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    Excellent video, we use fume extractors in a small electronics manufacturing operation. health is #1, period !!

  • @Anibal_avila74
    @Anibal_avila74 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    You got the reason by your side mr rossmann

  • @Jeff-Russ
    @Jeff-Russ 6 ปีที่แล้ว

    I felt like crap without any fan. I got a Lasko box fan, took it apart and sealed a cheap carbon filter at the intake, then got a small desk fan which I put right where I'm working aimed at the box fan intake. Totally worked.

  • @ceejay_gaming9636
    @ceejay_gaming9636 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Wow this was a really good video cause I never really took these fume extractors seriously

  • @laidman2007
    @laidman2007 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    This was brilliant, particularly the analogy to the repition and tolerance of racist statements. I'm a newbie in the electronics world and have been holding off on soldering until my cheapo fume extractor arrived from China. It got lost in the mail. How lucky can a person get? Now I'll wait a little longer and buy a proper fume extractor. Thank you. Roberta Laidman

  • @tomaszknapik4563
    @tomaszknapik4563 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    I love the way you think, great video! :) I'm just thinking to by such thing for myself. Does it also block all bad smell during soldering? I'm thinking of simple fan&carbon filter (ZD-152A).

  • @richfiles
    @richfiles 6 ปีที่แล้ว

    I got a fume extractor years ago. I picked up a cheap mod kit from a surplus store, and screwed it to a 120mm fan. Rather than the typical computer fan, I used the high flow, 120 volt, all metal fans that we installed on motor drivers at my old job. Good airflow. I got a rotary inline lamp switch and some power cords from the same surplus shop, and wired up simple fume extractors that you could just place on the bench and run, with no extra power supply or wall wart. I loved the kit so much, I bought enough kits for all the soldering stations at work and told them to use the shit. If they weren't sure whether it was worth it to spend on 'em, fuck it. FREE. Just use the shit! It was super simple. They did like it and did pay me. I still have, and still use mine, though these days, that old industrial fan has a but of a rattle to it. I should look into replacing it. Over the years, I got my hands on a bunch of variacs, and learned I could plug the fan into a variac to control it's speed. Even dialing it back to 90-100 volts greatly reduced the noise, while still giving a pretty good suck. The original kits only had the white filters, like your prefilter, but I got a set of carbon filters to sit behind the white filter later on.
    The flux fumes always bothered me. I used to just open a window and hope a breeze would clear it, but that doesn't work in winter, or in heavy rain. I wish I had had a good (or even a cheap) fume extractor when I was still a kid!

  • @DiegoAUTC
    @DiegoAUTC 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    No hate here man great video. Glad you and Linus meet up I'm a huge fan of both of your channels.

  • @therealcherti
    @therealcherti 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    up until I watched your videos ( started a while ago) I didn't even know the fumes were any harmful at all. Obviously I looked into it and now have a flexible pipe with a blower to suck the fumes from me workbench directly outside, spent probably like 30 bucks on it but it does the job for me. And yes I know it probably isn't ideal but it's the only way for right now how to efficiently get the fumes away from me.
    Thanks for the video Luis :)

  • @ulwur
    @ulwur 6 ปีที่แล้ว

    We had air extraction at the repair shop I used to work in 20 years ago, just tubes and a fan to blow it outside. And the way these tubes looked like on the inside after a few months !! Tar and sticky goo from the flux all over!

  • @arjuna207
    @arjuna207 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    great clip, important topic. not to make fun but solder smell has a bit of nostalgia for me, but non the less i have a diy fume extractor with a carbon filter because in the end i value my heath above all

  • @PixelguardianGame
    @PixelguardianGame 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    Honestly I've never even thought about fume extraction. I don't work with that type of stuff, but I totally see what you're saying.

  • @TheTarrMan
    @TheTarrMan 8 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I'm with you on the fumes but when I solder I just open a window and stick a box fan in it. I don't do it for a living through. May father used to make tattoo needles for a living (between jobs as a machinist). The funny thing is he was paranoid about the fumes and actually took the time to build a basic fume extractor yet he smoked two pack a day. He has COPD now.

  • @ThatInfidel1
    @ThatInfidel1 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Dude, your words are the fucking truth! Even in the not-so-distant future! Thanks for the great message!

  • @obfuscated3090
    @obfuscated3090 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    You can build a beastly extractor for peanuts using the small or large shop vac of your choice and any HEPA and activated charcoal filter panels you wish. Mine is a small shop vac whose hose fits the cut-off end of an antifreeze jug which took longer to wash off than connect. You can use clamps, magnets or zip tie yours as I did to a spare monitor arm.
    Filters are key. You can match or beat commercial units simply by using appropriate filter media but the best way is to exhaust outdoors because "filter and recirculate" does not give you FRESH air.
    Plumbing shop vacs is easy as is cutting a panel to insert in a window so your fume extractor also draws clean air into your workspace. If you exhaust your air you don't need to filter it.
    I collect all the shop vacs large and small I can score cheap (yard sales etc) and have them throughout my shops. If you place your filter on the exhaust side of the vacuum it can be large, bulky and mount anywhere including walls (unused wall space should be put to work for zero footprint equipment locations, I even hang my 1U server like a painting).

  • @kittythe5750
    @kittythe5750 8 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    hey for the people who are broke and love to solder. I'm setting up an inline fan with some exhaust ducting to exhaust to outside. Louis has a closed loop system which filters air and replenishes the air in the room. A cheaper option would just be exhaust to outside. like a dryer vent.
    I'm going to be setting this up on my station after seeing that abortion of an air filter. Thanks again louis for the psa! 80 year old me thanks you.

  • @Interestingworld4567
    @Interestingworld4567 6 ปีที่แล้ว

    I'm so glad I found this video thanks man.
    I agree with you on everything. I prefer to speed even $5000 USD instead of spending my time in the hospital and probably later like 100K for surgeries and shit like that. Keep it up man you help a lot. 👍

  • @tastytechaddictsmtb
    @tastytechaddictsmtb 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    A good way to do this on a budget is what I'm doing, take a high power bathroom inline extractor fan, place hoss on both ends, one end goes into the loft and out under the eaves, the other end comes through the ceiling and sits above the soldering station, job done, no filters needed, extracts as well as the expensive ones.

  • @SevenDeMagnus
    @SevenDeMagnus 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Cool, thanks.

  • @ElectricEvan
    @ElectricEvan 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you Louis Rossman! I demanded when I started at this job that they buy a fume extractor. It was my first job in electronics so people were touchy about it. Even with it I clean our workbenches and even with the larger debris cleaned off I still have my white paper towels recolored kind of shiny grey after. That said I only change the filter once a year and it looks a lot less "fluffy" than yours. Are you heating stuff besides solder and flux in that room? The only time I see fluffyness like that is in my home fume extractor when I don't vacuum often enough. In other words dead skin cells seem to make it fluffy.
    I can say the Hakko 430 is nice and quite compared to their older product which was a noise nightmare.

  • @TheDoctorCMG
    @TheDoctorCMG 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    I bought one of the POS small Hakko extractor mainly because I have Jack shit for room around my solder iron. And it was all because you drove the point home that I really need one. Even if it does require me to position what I'm soldering close to the extractor.
    One day I'll be able to get the big boy!

  • @Malcicus
    @Malcicus 6 ปีที่แล้ว

    You are AWESOME!

  • @TheBatteryDoctor
    @TheBatteryDoctor 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    I assume it also sucks up DUST particles in the air and since the solder is not in gasform that is most likely dust, dont you think? It looks exactly like the dust in a vaccum cleaner.
    Im also interesed in FA430 but $842.15 is a bit much. Can you recommend any other models that "sucks" more then the toy Fa400? Looking at a CXG 493A, have you tried that that?

  • @davejacobsen3014
    @davejacobsen3014 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    Worked in a bar in my youth. Used electrostatic air cleaner in bar, in those days I saw how nasty cigarette smoke was in a small bar.

  • @fsevilla1
    @fsevilla1 6 ปีที่แล้ว

    even at the mayor repair centers here in the U.S don't use such a good extraction system like tbe one that you have.
    at the most they use the fan with a small filter type of system.
    kudos to you for using a quality filtration system.
    in the only place i see a befter solution is in VGA REWORK

  • @8pac37
    @8pac37 7 ปีที่แล้ว

    Just curious: Would a spray paint mask work too, as long as you would be willing to change the filters regularly?

  • @CircularMirror7
    @CircularMirror7 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    I got a purifier filter box from a thrift store for 20 bucks. That was custom made probably for some elderly person . Stripped the UV light and added a hose and 2x AC fans, carbon filter. I lucked out. Way better then my cobbled thing I had before.

  • @Yrouel86
    @Yrouel86 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    Even just a simple pc fan pointed so it blows away the fumes can go a long way to make things better

  • @bartoszpucilowski4051
    @bartoszpucilowski4051 6 ปีที่แล้ว

    Hi Louise, do you think this extractor will be suitable to use with a small desk laser CNC machine? Thank you for advice :-)

  • @exiletomars
    @exiletomars 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    I do hobby soldering(not a whole lot even) and while I first started doing anything with soldering I would just have a stupid setup of a couple of fans(a smaller fan next to where I was soldering, and a bigger fan a foot and a half or two away going out my window to blow it outside) to get rid of the solder smoke, but then I ended up getting one of the cheap(like $50) solder fume extractors online, and I definitely enjoy the piece of mind that I'm probably not gonna get some sort of terrible lung disease(although I used to smoke cigarettes, but I quit, so hopefully I'll not end up with lung cancer).

  • @anonanonme2463
    @anonanonme2463 6 ปีที่แล้ว

    I weld most of it is enclosed spaces, bought a painter helmet and air fan. I was called Buck Rogers because the helmet looks like a space helmet with a hose on back of it.

  • @BrBill
    @BrBill 5 ปีที่แล้ว

    Had a board assembler job for Honeywell in the mid-1980s. We had a lot of great equipment at our workstations, but fume extraction wasn't part of the deal, and we cleaned our boards with freon sprayers. I can only imagine that the inside of my lungs look just like that filter. Including the chunks of yellow tape.

  • @michaelkolozsvari3575
    @michaelkolozsvari3575 ปีที่แล้ว

    I'm wondering if you redid this video today what would you recommend? I'm a stained glass artist that does soldering and I totally agree with you and trying to find resources to choose a decent fume extractor.

  • @Nuclearlandlord
    @Nuclearlandlord 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I replaced my Sega Genesis Shadowrun save game battery via soldering a couple years ago. Totally not worth it. I did not know what I was breathing for the couple of seconds of soldering. Thank you for this PSA!

  • @thatmand4542
    @thatmand4542 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Amen,this man is speaking nothing but facts.....PERIOD