SoundMods wrote:
I have my doubts about that, you're just replacing a bunch of braided copper with a bunch of steel...
Roscoe[/quote]
I get it. Steel is much less thermally conductive than copper. The thermal conductivity of carbon steel is much lower than that of copper. Its thermal conductivity is around 45 watts per kelvin per meter.
The thermal conductivity of copper is typically around 385 to 401 W/(m·K) -or- almost 9 times that of steel.
My issue with that is that is wastes time cutting small pieces of solder wick especially when you first don't sop up all the solder on the first try.
I just feed more wick off the spool. Then clip off the saturated portion and move on to the next solder joint.[/quote]
To add to why Roscoe is wrong, the thermal connection between the tweezers and the wick is pretty poor. This definitely works, but it is a PITA.