🔥 Heat Up Your Skills with Precision!
The 110V 850W LED Microcomputer Electric Hot Plate is a high-efficiency soldering preheating station designed for precision and safety. With a temperature range of 30-400℃ and a durable aluminum alloy heating plate, it ensures rapid and uniform heating. Ideal for various applications, including cell phone repairs and PCB work, this hot plate is a must-have for any professional lab or workshop.
Temperature Stability | 1.5 °C |
Number of Channels | 1 |
Lower Temperature Rating | 30 Degrees Celsius |
Upper Temperature Rating | 400 Degrees Celsius |
Wattage | 850 watts |
Display | LCD |
Voltage | 110 Volts (AC) |
Item Dimensions D x W x H | 8.66"D x 8.66"W x 5.7"H |
D**H
The hotplate is built better than expected and works better than expected.
I purchased the hot plated for soldering rework use.The aluminum plate is plate is about 1/4 inch thick. By reflecting the light off of the surface at an angle one can see machining marks. It looks like the plate was flattened by a rather large fly cutter.When first turned on at 150C there is some burn-off from the plate which was probably the remaining cutting oil. I suggest doing the first turn on outside.At 150C, the hotplate overshot by about 15-20 degrees then fell back to 150C and stayed there.I used a thermocouple probe, to spot measure, over the plate and found 255F +/- 5 degrees which is probably the error limts of the measurements. In short it looks pretty uniform. The reading of 255F converts to 124C but the thermocouple probe bead was just held against the plate so is probably giving a low reading compared to the actual aluminum temperature. The wire on the thermocouple also acts as a heat sink which also lowers the temperature reading.The paint is a power coat and is rather resident to wear; as I discovered while removing some paint for a ground connection.The manual warns to check the ground. I did and the ground measured ok. I removed the paint around the screw that grounds the plate assembly via the two sets of metal standoffs (see pictures). Then I added a spade lock washer under the screw (see picture).The chassis ground is provided by a screw that bites into an expanded/drilled (punched raised) place in the metal that allows the screw to get a bite into the metal. I removed the top bit of paint on the raised spot, so as to improve the grounding.The heater wires seem a bit small but do work. The red wires near the heaters have a fiber sheaf, covered with something that feels like a silicon coating.There are 3 places in the screw bank where the bare wire was just pushed in and tightened. Reading the picture from the right to left the screws are 1, 2 and 4. I added forked lugs onto the wires and soldered the wire to the lugs. This is probably not needed but makes me feel better about the connections.The fuse is in the 120vac plug receptacle and can be removed by using a small screw driver as a pry bar. The fuse is a 10 amp, fast blow. A picture shows the fuse holder setting near the top of the holder. The fuse holder slides into the 120 socket near the bottom. A rather nice design.The chassis is similar to a tear down shown on YouTube titled "ANSAI/BOZAN 946C+ - 800W Electronic SMD Hot Plate Teardown”. The temperature controller is not the same as in the video.The temperature controller is labeled as a RRKKCC (see pictures). There is a website listing that temperature controller as a "C100 K indexing relay transmission without alarm”. On Amazon if you search for REX-C100 you will find a number of models/clones that could be used as replacements if needed or wanted.The installed REX-C100 clone uses the internal relay to control the current. There appears to be a built in heatsink for the relay. I stopped the teardown at this point since there is no obvious way to open the unit without destroying it (see pictures).The RRKKCC is attached to the chassis by two sliding/ratcheting plastic holders. If one is careful and gently opens the holders a bit at a time on the top & bottom of the RRKKCC, then the unit can be removed from the holder. Note, on the bottom side I used a piece of metal strap to slightly separate the holder.My final conclusion is that the unit works better than expected and is built better than expected. The temperature controller has a heatsink and may eventually die (or not) but looks easy to replace with a different controller. The entire unit comes apart pretty easy and is a clever design. The ventilation holes probably have air going in through the sides and out through the top to provide cooling off of the temperature relay. The price is right.
M**E
Slow heat up. Not too bad for the price.
Bought this 6 months ago, photos were from then and I can not exactly remember. Hot plate works okay, it's takes quite a while for it to reach the set temperature but heat is pretty consistent and the controller maintains it quite well. Heats up with four heater cartridge.Might want to take it apart and double check when you first received it. Also suggest heating it outside for the first time to burn off all the machining oil or what not as the smoke from it is quite nasty. All metal parts seems to have continuity with ground, but it's really seems to just be through a single screw. The spade connectors for the AC input is a bit loose. I had disconnected it and flatten it a bit to have the connection a bit tighter.
P**Y
Works great!
Comes up to temp quickly. Instructions are not the best. Wish it read in Fahrenheit and not Celsius.
M**R
Don't expect much
First off, as many have said the spade terminal are the incorrect size. That is why the spades slop around and the secondary insulation crimp were missed on some wires. Ground points needed to be inspected and paint removed and screws nutted. The unit performs as expected but the rating 850w is misleading. It may be so if the unit was 220Vac but mine is 120V. The controller works well and the manufacturer sliced open the original temp controller box to add a large heatsink. It's ugly but it does the job. Be aware it will also take a day or so to get rid of the noxious Bakelite fumes. What I do like is the enclosure size, the rubber feet, and thick sized plate (but bevels needed to be sanded). I've basically tore everything out and replaced it with my own wire, controller, crimps and SSR with ramp and soak features.
J**N
This is a simple and effective pid temperature controlled hot plate.
This is my first purpose built hotplate and everything has worked great so far.I mostly use this hot plate for additional heating when soldering and removing BGA chips and it has worked well. I've kept it at about 100c for preheating boards and my thermal camera shows a pretty accurate temperature with the heat being spread well.I opened up the unit just to check for any huge safety issues before I turned it on. While I am not an expert, I did not see anything that bothered me. All the wiring was heat resistant and the controller has a heat sink. The device was also fused, which made me feel better.Overall, I am really happy with this hotplate and it seems built to last.
Z**E
Great for Novices and a must for PCB repair
After using a heat gun to get my boards to temp this was the next and best step to take.The plate only gets hot where something contacts it although the frame does get hot and like some other review said, you need to be careful because of its large size you don't burn yourself or drop something on it which will stick to the plate (like I have done).My boards reflow with a hot work gun at around 125 C so I have to set the machine to 200 C and using a thermal gun wait until the temperature reaches 125 on the component I am working on. As a novice I am not sure if this is something which is common, but my boards do have a lot of thermal protection so that might be the cause.I would highly recommend for the money.Only thing I would like some info on is how to clean the plate of debris which has adhered to it. This is purely my issue as I made a mess first time using it and whilst it works fine still, I would like to get the debris cleaned off it!
A**R
Started on fire
Used for the first time and it started on fire and quit working. Better yet, my return window has closed so I'm just out the money.
P**A
Excellent for Chemistry ...
In addition to electronic repair work, this is a great tool for chemistry experiments where exact heating temperatures are needed.
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