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Chris
Reviewed in the United States on February 5, 2025
Self fluxing, nice flow characteristics
Jill De Foe
Reviewed in the United States on February 13, 2025
I have tried aluminum solder before to no avail. This solder works as good as using other solders as far as flowing out on the prices to be repaired and is very strong.
Oleg Kalivyerda
Reviewed in the United States on January 4, 2025
Clean both tubes, one outside and one inside, use minimum temperature so as not to melt the aluminum tube, works great.
David K.
Reviewed in the United States on January 29, 2025
This stuff was not easy to work with. The flux amount seemed lacking and inconsistent. I would not recommend using on an AC condenser coil or radiator.
Quality Assurance Officer #14245
Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2025
This stuff works amazing. I can't believe how easily the flow started. The bond was strong as anything, no leaks. Copper to aluminum. Just spend your time cleaning the joint, especially the surfaces to mate. This is a low-temp brazing solder, too. So you can literally use a butane torch or a 60-watt soldering iron to get this to flow. I'm not saying that will get your joint hot enough, but this is a low-temp solder. Flows easy. Durable joints the very first time. Couldn't have asked for more.
Frodo's Mom
Reviewed in the United States on November 8, 2024
During our mini split installation, we had to solder copper tubing to aluminum. It seems pricey, but it was worth its weight in gold compared to paying for soneone else to complete the installation. This stuff flows out easily if you follow the instructions carefully.
Kyle
Reviewed in the United States on August 25, 2023
I used this Brazing Alloy to repair a refrigerator that had a pinhole leak where the copper piping met the aluminum coil. I had my doubts on if this would work as brazing copper to aluminum is difficult and prone to leaks which is why my fridge leaked in the first place. The refrigerator company saved .2 cents by using aluminum tubing and told me my fridge was junk after only 3 years and not reparable. Instead of throwing it into the land fill i gave this brazing wire a try and what do you know it fixed the leak. It wasn't very difficult to use just a little pricey. However it saved a refrigerator from the landfill so i would say it was worth every penny.
Jason
Reviewed in the United States on May 13, 2023
As part of a retrofit job, I used this brazing rod to add a #10 nut to a used and very old R12 automotive AC line. I'm not sure if brazing rod was the best choice but I decided on it because I know it's a stronger bond compared to the lower temp aluminum soldering rods. Plus this rod has a flux core which seems to be very important for capillary action. I would have just tig welded it but I read that tig welding old R12 lines is problematic and results in having pin holes. Not sure if that's true but I didn't want to chance it. Some areas of the joint look a bit bumpy/porous, not sure if that's normal since this is the first time I've done this. I pressure tested it and found no leaks. I'm not able to test it at operating pressure since this is the high side line but I expect it'll be fine. I'll do an update once I get the system operating.
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