Sick of crap solder

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Can someone recommend solder sutiable for general purpose work - home / hobby.

How can it be possible for there to be so much diversity in solder type when in the begining there probably was only one type - lead. Why do idiots diversify basics?

I tried using chinese stuff and it makes the task of soldering headphone wires together really unbearable in terms of trviality.
 
I agree.
In the past I could easily buy rather thin solder "made in Germany". Now I can still get a German quality (Rothenberger) but only in 1.00mm which is too thick for most electronic work. I believe am important feature is the rosin.
I then tried solder from out east because I could get the 0.4-0.6 dimensions. Only the brands with about the price as here really gave the same quality solderings. I even got some environmental friendly solder that actually seems to work but leaves a mat surface and not the good impression as good old lead solder.
The world is degrading.
 
The reason for the diversity is the world of electronics has been moving to a complete leadfree soldering environment.
Now there is more types of solder you can poke a soldering iron at, all differing slightly by composition due to patents and improvements. Now everyone is confused.
I can vouch for using multicore solder, I have used this at work for years.
For soldering SMD I use a multicore LMP with 2% silver as this provides better wetting.
As suggested by Mark that roll of 63/37 multicore solder will last you for years.
 
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It's expensive but the cardas quad-eutectic solder is superb. It has greater physical strength than tin/lead eutectic, which is great when there's any chance of significant vibration or any physical strain on a joint (think subwoofer lead wires for ex).

Their lead-free variant is also very good. The cost is STEEP but solder lasts a long time and goes a long way, for most hobbyists, 1 roll will last years if not lifetime. I've not noticed any flux degradation on my 10 year old rolls of either type.
 
. . . if you're anywhere near Kilmarnock you can drop in and have some.
Can I drop in too?

Only joking - I have several reels of original recipe solder which I inherited from my late Uncle, some of which could date back to WW2 when he installed field telephones behind enemy lines in Burma.

I may just be story telling, but whatever its vintage, his solder still works a treat! 😎
 
386844 Multicore | Soldering, Desoldering, Rework Products | DigiKey

It's tin/lead eutectic (63-37), it's made by a reputable manufacturer, it's sold by a reputable distributor, and its incredibly thin (0.015" == 0.4mm diameter) so you can use it for both thru-hole and surface mount soldering.

I second that, it works great. My experience with audiophile silver content solder is that it doesnt flow as well, cant remember the brands I tried but I no longer use them.
 
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