Ladyada's Electronics Toolkit -

Manufactured by: Adafruit Industries

$100.00

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Starting out on your electronics adventure?
Want to wield the mighty soldering iron?
Tired of saying "I'd totally get into electronics if I only knew what tools to get..."?

Working with substandard equipment is a terrible way to learn electronics: a lot of frustration with too little success. The right tool set will keep you progressing without the stressing.

This toolbox contains carefully selected hand tools that will last you for many many years.

  • 30W adjustable temperature soldering iron (Model XY258) - with a temperature control on the side and indicator LED so you can go from standard to lead-free to silver solder. Comes with a 1/16" tip which is good for through hole and some larger surface mount assembly. Note this iron is 120V ONLY, not for use in 220V countries
  • Soldering stand - a real stand with sponge and double spring prevents your iron from 'rolling away' or burning a hole in the table. Essential for your safety.
  • Solder, rosin-core, 0.031" diameter, 1/4 lb (100g) spool - Standard 60/40 solder for electronics work. Most toolkits give you a tiny bit, but this spool will last you for months and you won't run out in the middle of your project
  • Solder sucker - Strangely enough, that's the technical term for this desoldering vacuum tool. Useful in cleaning up mistakes, every electrical engineer has one of these on their desk.
  • Solder wick/braid 5ft spool - Used along with the solder sucker to clean up soldering messes. Wick really comes in handy when soldering or desoldering surface-mount parts. Even if you don't have the best iron for SMT work, a bit of wick will fix it up.
  • Panavise Jr - PCB holder and general purpose 360 degree mini-vise. I use mine every day, they are the best thing for holding your circuit board steady, and the soft jaws are not conductive so you can do power tests at the same time.
  • Basic multimeter (model MAS830) is a good-all-around basic multimeter. Has a continuity tester, DC/AC voltage and current, resistance, transistor and diode/LED test. Runs on a 9V battery. Please note the photo is not of this precise model. The model incuded has no backlight, I'll fix the photo soon
  • Diagonal cutters (model Xcelite 170M) - the best diagonal cutters, these are comfortable to use and have strong nippers for perfect trimming of wires and leads. I've used my pair every day for years.
  • Wire strippers - basic adjustable wire strippers, they are the standard issue for all MIT students
  • Micro needle-nose pliers - for bending, forming, holding, squeezing and plying all of those little components.
  • Solid-core wire, 22AWG, 25ft spools - Three spools! In black, red and yellow. Perfect for bread-boarding and wiring.
  • Half size solderless breadboard - for prototyping your next project, these breadboards can snap together to expand
  • Bonus! 5V power supply kit - DC power jack, protection diode, 7805 1Amp 5V regulator, two 25V and 6V bypass capacitors, two 0.1uF ceramic capacitors, red and green indicator LEDs and matching resistors. All the parts necessary to power up your first electronics project from a wall adapter or batteries.
  • Select to include one of our suggested beginner kits (Mintyboost, Drawdio or TV-B-Gone) and you'll also receive a "I learned to solder" embroidered badge!


Blog posts tagged with Tools:
Pick and place table has arrived!
The pick and place table has arrived, we bought a nice solid metal table (AG-300) which is usually used for kitchen equipment. Next up we’re going to get a stand up workstation for the keyboard, monitor and mouse that we can easily move around. Here is what we ordered…
Round cable stripper – do you use this?
We’ve seen the wire stripping technique used by broke students and hobbyists, but some industry ‘vets’ complained. We found it interesting that nearly everyone had a -different- way of doing it (slice down with razor, cut down with dykes, cut with razor then bend, pull on insulation and /then/ cut down, pull on the internal read more...
HOW TO – Cut insulation off multi-core wire
HOW TO – Cut insulation off multi-core wire – (m4v)… have a handy tip on doing this too? Post it up in the comments!
The best affordable volt-ohm meter?
Cool tools asked “What’s the best affordable volt-ohm meter”- here’s what we said... Most people on the internet will reflexively say “FLUKE!@” but really they’re overkill: Anyone who isn’t sure what multimeter to get doesn’t use them often enough to justify spending more than about $50 Best supercheap: Mastech MAS-830 ($11) from http://www.elexp.com/tst_s830.htm and others Best midrange: read more...
Woodworking magazine’s Altoids tool contest
Woodworking magazine’s Altoids tool contest via MAKE. Christopher writes - I was worried this would happen. Some of the entrants to our contest to build a tool from an Altoids tin built tools that actually worked. Sigh. Woodworkers are so practical. We’re also practical. And so the winner of our contest is Tom Bier, who built read more...
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