Good soldering is the foundation of a reliable FPV drone. A cold joint on a motor wire or ESC power lead can cause intermittent failures, voltage drops, or even complete loss of control mid-flight. This guide covers the tools, techniques, and common mistakes that separate a professional build from a ticking time bomb.

Essential Soldering Tools
Soldering Iron
A temperature-controlled iron with a fine tip is non-negotiable for pad-level work. The Pinecil ($26) and TS100/TS101 ($50-70) are the two standards in FPV — both are portable, heat up in under 10 seconds, and run off LiPo batteries in the field. Look for a chisel tip (D24 or BC2 style) around 2.4mm wide — it provides the best heat transfer for FPV pads.
Solder and Flux
- Solder: 63/37 tin-lead with rosin core, 0.6-0.8mm diameter. Lead-free solder requires higher temperatures and is harder to work with — stick with leaded for FPV builds.
- Flux: A syringe of no-clean flux is your best friend. Apply a tiny dab to every pad before soldering. MG Chemicals 8341 is a community favorite.
Additional Must-Haves
- Brass sponge: For cleaning the iron tip — better than a wet sponge.
- Solder wick: For removing excess solder or cleaning pads.
- Tweezers: Curved ceramic-tip tweezers for positioning wires.
- Helping hands: A third-hand tool with alligator clips.
- Smoke stopper: Always test with a smoke stopper before plugging in a LiPo.

Soldering Temperature Guide
| Joint Type | Temperature | Tips |
|---|---|---|
| Small signal pads (UART, RX) | 320-350C | Work quickly (1-2 sec) |
| ESC power pads (VBAT, GND) | 370-400C | Pre-tin pad and wire |
| XT60/XT30 connectors | 400-420C | Use larger tip |
| Motor wires to ESC | 350-370C | Tin wire first |
| Battery lead (10AWG+) | 420-450C | High-mass tip needed |
Common Mistakes
| Mistake | Appearance | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Cold joint | Dull, grainy, lumpy | Add flux, reheat |
| Too much solder | Bulbous blob | Use solder wick |
| Lifted pad | Copper detached | Use nearby pad or trace |
Your soldering iron is the most important tool on your bench. Treat it with respect, practice deliberately, and your builds will fly reliably for hundreds of packs.
