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Choose from a variety of screwdriver, flat, conical, chisel, bevel, needle, and knife tips.
Compact and portable, these stations are best for repetitive soldering tasks that only require one tool.
Switch between different soldering and desoldering tools quickly—these stations have either two or three channels to plug in multiple tools so they're ready to go.
Replace your station's soldering iron or swap it out for a different wattage.
Solder a connection without touching it by melting the solder with hot air.
Remove solder from your workpiece. These irons plug into compatible soldering and desoldering stations and the nozzle heats up the solder.
These irons come with one fixed temperature tip—to adjust the temperature, change out the tip.
These stations are ESD (electrostatic discharge) safe to protect sensitive components. The tip is a fixed temperature—change out the tip to adjust the temperature.
Solder and desolder from the same station.
Combine a handle, a heating element, and a tip to create the iron you need.
From electronics to metal sealing, these irons handle intermittent soldering jobs.
Use these irons for your high-volume jobs.
These irons put an extra layer of cork insulation between your hand and the iron.
Ultra thin, these irons are for precise soldering in electronics applications.
These irons have a large tip for excellent heat transfer, making them ideal for running seams in sheet metal.
These guns heat up the instant you pull the trigger and cool down quickly when you let go.
Kits include a gun, tips for a variety of applications, solder, and a wrench.
Pull the trigger for instant heat; release it and the gun cools quickly.
A plier-style handpiece confines heat to only where it touches when you’re treating, brazing, and silver soldering small parts.
Automatically feed solder wire to the tip of your iron.
With the push of a button, these irons convert from a straight grip to a pistol grip with either a 45° or 90° head angle. Battery power and no cord means you can take them where you need them.
A rechargeable battery powers these irons.
These irons run on AA batteries and are for intermittent use.
Adjust the tip temperature to suit your application using a button control.
Kits include an iron, tips for a variety of applications, a heat-shrink attachment, an ejector, and a cap.
These cordless irons run on butane gas, so you don't have to recharge a battery between uses.
Kits include an iron, tips for a variety of applications, a stand, a sponge, and a cap.
Solder in spaces that are difficult to reach without waiting for a battery to charge.
Traditionally used for sheet metal work, heat the heads of these coppers with an external flame source and they store enough heat to complete long joints.
Tinner removes excess oxide and replenishes the tip’s original coating.
Bar cleaner removes heavy oxidation from soldering tips and coppers.
Remove oxidation from soldering tips with these dry brass-wool balls.
Sensor-activated brushes remove oxides, debris, and excess solder from soldering tips without damaging their plating. Insert your soldering tip to automatically start cleaning.
Hold a sponge for cleaning soldering iron tips.
These torches handle brazing and soldering, as well as heating jobs.
Two burners with a short, wide flame concentrate heat over a large area. The tip rotates 360° to put the heat exactly where you need it.
Tackle roofing and other heavy duty heating applications—these torches have a BTU output starting at nearly seven times the output of standard propane torches.
The torch tip rotates 360° to put the heat exactly where you need it.
Connect these torches to a propane cylinder for light-duty flame applications.
These torches have approximately half the BTU output of standard propane torches for use in light duty applications.
Access overhead and other hard-to-reach applications.
Save time by quickly connecting and disconnecting your propane torch tips to get the right output for your job. Kits can also be used with Apachi, HPG, and propylene.
Attach these installation tips to a soldering iron. The tips transfer heat from the soldering iron to the insert, softening the surrounding plastic. When the plastic cools, it solidifies around the insert to keep it secure.
Extract heat-set inserts by attaching these tips to a soldering iron. The tips transfer heat from the soldering iron to the insert, softening the surrounding plastic to loosen the insert so it can be removed.