When it comes to soldering and brazing equipment, VEVOR has every type of tool, power setup, and use requirement you could imagine. You can use VEVOR soldering and brazing equipment to repair plastic parts in cars, work with HVAC refrigerant lines, or join metals in a professional workshop. You can use soldering irons and soldering stations to assemble and repair electronics, and brazing torches to join metals at high temperatures. Plastic welders and plastic welding kits can fix and make things from thermoplastic, hot-air rework stations to remove SMD components and perform reflow work. Every piece of soldering and brazing equipment is designed to consistently deliver heat, maintain joint quality, and last for years, even under professional use.
Do you have reliable soldering and brazing equipment on your repair bench, in your manufacturing workshop, in your HVAC service business, or at your hobbyist workstation? There are no performance issues with VEVOR's range because it does not have underpowered or poorly matched equipment. Selecting the wrong soldering and brazing equipment can lead to uneven joint quality and reduced output if the tools cannot maintain the desired temperature. VEVOR soldering and brazing equipment is a strong choice for many professional or workshop joining jobs because it has matched thermal output and application-specific tool setups.
When designing a soldering and brazing equipment workstation, the type of equipment is the most important factor to consider. Different types of equipment work best with different types of materials and joint shapes. Each type of soldering and brazing equipment delivers heat in a different way and within a different typical temperature range.
Both professional and amateur solderers use soldering stations and soldering irons for a wide range of tasks, including assembling electronics, repairing PCBs, and connecting wires. A soldering and brazing equipment station has a regulated power base, a soldering iron handpiece, a tip holder, and a cleaning system. It can keep the tip temperature stable and controlled, which independent soldering irons without regulated bases cannot do. There are different wattage levels of soldering irons for varying thermal demands.
For tasks such as removing SMD components, reworking BGAs, reflow soldering, and heat-shrink installation, hot air rework stations are useful additions to soldering irons and stations. They do this by providing controlled warm airflow. Many hot air repair stations feature both a hot air handpiece and a soldering iron station built into a single dual-function bench unit. That means you can use one piece of soldering and brazing equipment for both through-hole and SMD soldering.
Brazing torches are at the high-temperature end of the soldering and brazing equipment range. They use an open flame to produce heat suitable for joining metals at temperatures well above those of electric soldering irons and stations. For brazing to work, the filler metals must have liquidus temperatures above 450°C. That means the base-metal joint area needs to be heated continuously over a sufficient area. Only a torch flame can provide the light. Brazing torches can be used to join copper pipes in plumbing and HVAC refrigerant line installations.
There are different types of torch tips for various uses. Pencil-flame tips are good for fine jewelry and small parts. Medium, general-purpose tips are good for standard copper pipe and fitting joints. Large-area heating tips are good for heavy steel fabrications and joints with extensive surface area. Because they produce a lot of heat, allow you to adjust the flame strength, and feature different tip profiles, brazing torches are highly effective tools for joining metals in suitable applications.
It is not advisable to fix or make things out of thermoplastic with electric soldering tools or brazing torches. That is why plastic welders and plastic welding kits are here. A plastic welder heats a thermoplastic base material and a matched plastic welding rod to their fusion temperature. It lets the rod material flow into the joint and bond with it, forming a structural repair that can restore the original part to working order. Plastic welding kits include a welding tool and a variety of compatible welding rods for popular thermoplastics, including nylon, polypropylene, ABS, PVC, and polyethylene. People use these types of plastic welders to repair items such as car bumpers and trim, motorcycle fairings, marine parts, and farm equipment.
The plastic welding kit includes everything you need to start fixing thermoplastic right away, so you do not have to go out and buy welding rods, tip profiles, and tool accessories one at a time. The most important factor in determining the strength of a fusion weld and how long a repair will last is choosing the right welding rod material for the type of base plastic.
Knowing the power source and operating features is essential. These features determine the right soldering and brazing equipment for the job, based on the tools' flexibility, accuracy, and usability.
Whether you can use soldering and brazing equipment and how well it can maintain a stable goal temperature while working continuously depend on the power source you choose. Corded soldering and brazing equipment can draw power continuously from a fixed electrical source. It helps maintain a high-wattage output and precise PID temperature regulation, which many battery-powered tools cannot maintain for long. When working on a workshop bench, in a production soldering area, or anywhere else where the work comes to the tool, corded equipment is the best choice.
Cordless plastic welders and cordless plastic welding kits run on rechargeable battery packs. Hence, you can do repairs without worrying about where to plug in the power cord. If you need to fix a damaged panel on an automobile body in a workshop where it can not be brought to a bench, fix the parts. The most important specs to look at are the cordless plastic welding kit, battery capacity, and heat-up time. If the battery capacity is enough for the expected repair time and the heat-up time is quick from a cold start, then the cordless tool is suitable.
Digital temperature regulation on the soldering station displays the tip temperature in real time and allows operators to set the target temperature to within a small temperature increment. That gives them the control they need to work safely with heat-sensitive parts and lead-free solder alloys that require higher process temperatures. Because soldering and brazing equipment can use different tips, the user can choose an appropriate heat-transfer geometry for each joint type.
Soldering flux, solder wire, solder paste, tip-cleaning systems, and replacement heating elements are some of the consumable and maintenance parts that keep soldering and brazing equipment working well. Soldering flux removes surface oxidation from joint surfaces, allowing solder to adhere properly. Solder wire and paste provide the filler alloy for various joint types and process temperatures.
VEVOR offers a wide range of soldering and brazing equipment types, power configurations, temperature requirements, and accessory options for consistent, professional-level soldering, brazing, and plastic welding. The range includes soldering stations, soldering irons, brazing torches, plastic welders, plastic welding kits, and cordless plastic welders. We also offer cordless plastic welding kits, hot-air rework stations, and soldering parts & accessories. All of these are made to work reliably and last for a long time when used by professionals every day. Look through our full line of soldering and brazing equipment to make sure your workshop has everything it needs for every kind of repair and joining job.
Among VEVOR's soldering and brazing equipment are soldering stations and soldering irons for assembling electronics and repairing PCBs. We also have hot-air rework stations and brazing torches. HVAC and fabrication work, plastic welders, and plastic welding kits are for fixing thermoplastics.
Soldering joins metals using a filler alloy that melts below 450°C, making it well-suited for electronics and light-duty work. It makes it ideal for joining electronics, PCBs, and light copper pipes, as the lower temperatures protect heat-sensitive parts and base materials. Brazing uses filler metals that can melt at temperatures above 450°C to make stronger joints.
You will need soldering flux, solder wire made of the right alloy for the process temperature, and suitable base materials. Include solder paste for SMD reflow and hot-air rework, a tip-cleaning system to maintain efficient heat transfer, and help extend tip service life.