solder not shiny as it should be

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Hello, i need some help.
in the past i used some 30w cheap iron resin flux and 60/40 lead solder.
my joints where perfect shining, no problem at all.
on the past month i bought a ersa pico soldering station...
i bought also new solder but the same brand as the old one.
now my joints are no shiny anymore...
they are shiny when melted, but when the go dry they stay dull. some have shiny and dull parts at same time..
i m using the iron at 330 degrees celsius. i tried less temperature also...
what i m doing wrong?
is the new solder not good?
is my flux bad? (have it for one year)
is my iron?
 
So you made two changes, new iron and new solder.

Do you still have your old 30W iron? Do you still have any of the old solder?
If you do you could try the old iron with the new solder and the old solder with the new iron, that could help narrow down which part is the problem.
 
So you made two changes, new iron and new solder.

Do you still have your old 30W iron? Do you still have any of the old solder?
If you do you could try the old iron with the new solder and the old solder with the new iron, that could help narrow down which part is the problem.
I have the old iron, not the old solder but it is same brand and specs...
I will try with old iron to see...
 
i´m not using expensive solder... i´m using this normal one:
•• BROFIL 60 - Solid tin lead wire for electric soldering

maybe is the flux.. that is opened and not closed for more than and year...i stay the flux always opened to air...

There is no flux in this solder. It is solid wire. You should purchase flux cored solder wire instead. You can use external flux, but it's an unnecessary annoyance - just buy flux cored solder and it'll work.

Also, 60/40 alloy is not ideal either. 63/37 alloy has a low melting point and is a eutectic alloy, which means that it goes directly form a liquid to a solid state without any plastic region.

Not all fluxes are the same either. Many generic rosin fluxes work, but I prefer the Kester 245 flux for lead solder and 275 flux for lead free SAC305 alloy.
 
There is no flux in this solder. It is solid wire. You should purchase flux cored solder wire instead. You can use external flux, but it's an unnecessary annoyance - just buy flux cored solder and it'll work.

Also, 60/40 alloy is not ideal either. 63/37 alloy has a low melting point and is a eutectic alloy, which means that it goes directly form a liquid to a solid state without any plastic region.

Not all fluxes are the same either. Many generic rosin fluxes work, but I prefer the Kester 245 flux for lead solder and 275 flux for lead free SAC305 alloy.

Tks for the inputs... i´m going to buy it and test it also!
 
Non eutectic solder will usually get the dull finish. it happens when the solder is in its "paste" phase (one part is liquid, the other solid). temperature can influence this. Eutectic alloys don't go through the paste phase and solidify all at once (this is what Eutectic means).

However its a distraction from having enough but not too much heat. Too little or too much and you will damage the PCB. Needs to be hot enough and enough mass to melt the solder quickly but not so much as to damage things. Too hot and the solder won't tin the tip either.
 
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