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June 2017

What To Do With Leaded Solder?

I have a bunch of 2 lb rolls of leaded solder that I no longer plan to use, given the availability of lead-free solder. How should I dispose of the solder? Is it considered hazardous waste due to the lead?

#6172
Derek Raya
Derek Raya



Answers

I will use it. How much do you want for it?

Karl Aderer
Bay Saint Louis, MS

I'll take it as I still use leaded solder.

Dan Thompson
Paris, KY

Leaded solder is still available and widely used, both in aerospace and in the repair and rework of older equipment that was made with leaded solder. Many hobbyists including myself prefer leaded solder because it flows better and makes much nicer joints. As long as you don’t chew on it and are not disposing of millions of tons of equipment made with it there is not really a hazard in having or using it. If you don’t want it I would encourage you to give it to somebody else or alternately you could sell it on ebay.

James Sweet
via email

Leaded solder is considered hazardous waste. If you want to get rid of it reasonably, you can take it to your local house hold hazardous waste. Contact your municipality and they should be able to help you out with that. HHW usually is only one or two days a year at your local collection site.

Lerch
Milwaukee, WI

Most countries would consider it hazardous — as you surmise — and it should be disposed of responsibly, according to local regs. (Whoever accepts dead car batteries should take it for free?)

But should you get rid of it all? The fact that you have it at all indicates you’re interested in electronics, either from repair or construction. The important point I’m trying to make is that the two types of solder don’t play well together, so for reliability, older equipment should only be soldered with leaded solder (and vice versa.)

Do some Googling to check it out. Don’t use plumbing lead-free solder for electronics, either! If you’re giving up the hobby, then shame, but so be it.

Sally Jelfs
Brackley/Northants

If you are a hobbyist, why not just use it. Unless you are selling a product in high volume you’re not going to distroy the world. And it’s so much better than the lead free stuff.

Robert Wojciechowski
Davisburg, MI

Send it to me. Or to your local makerspace or electronics club (or robotics club, model train club, so on). Most of us prefer to work with leaded solder rather than lead-free for a whole host of reasons.

Officially you’re supposed to dispose of it at a local waste materials convenience center, but I just cant see it going to waste when so many of us are looking for leaded solder.

Scott Hall
Raleigh, NC

Take it to a metals recycling center that deals in lead (usually those that take old lead acid batteries). It is generally considered hazardous waste, so don’t throw it away in your trash bin.

You might look into see if you have any kind of municipal or county hazardous waste collection facilities as a part of your home garbage pickup service as well. They may have a drop-off location that can take it.

Finally, you might consider donating it to a local maker or hacker space; a lot of people love leaded solder over non-leaded, due to certain properties it has versus the other.

Andrew Ayers
Glendale, AZ

Instead of throwing it away which is probably illegal, especially if you live in CA, why don’t you give it to other hobbyists. Would you take the cost of shipping to send a spool?

I don’t do any commercial work, so using leaded solder is no problem. The cost of solder for a lot of us retired hobbyist is a lot. Also, what diameter is the solder and does it have a rosin core?

Richard R Pope
Reedsburg, WI