The Tiny Soldering Iron Revolution
For decades, soldering irons followed the same formula: a heavy transformer base station, a thick cable, and a wand that takes 2-3 minutes to heat up. Then TS100 clones running open-source firmware changed everything — putting temperature control, OLED displays, and 8-second heat-up into a device the size of a thick pen.
The latest generation is even simpler: power it directly from any USB-C PD charger or power bank. I tested a popular $17 model (sold under dozens of brand names on Amazon and AliExpress) to see how it stacks up.
What You Get for $17
The iron arrives in a compact case with:
- The iron itself (grip, heating element, tip)
- A USB-C to USB-C cable (braided, surprisingly nice)
- A small stand
- A bit of solder to get started
- One conical tip pre-installed
Setup takes 30 seconds: plug into USB-C, set your temperature on the two-button interface, and wait 8 seconds.
Real Testing Results
Heat-Up Speed
From room temperature (22°C) to 350°C: 7.8 seconds. This is comparable to $100+ cartridge-style irons and dramatically faster than any traditional ceramic-heater iron.
Temperature Accuracy
Using an external thermocouple, I measured:
- Set to 300°C → actual tip: 298°C (±2°C)
- Set to 350°C → actual tip: 346°C (±4°C)
- Set to 400°C → actual tip: 392°C (±8°C)
Accuracy is excellent at common soldering temperatures. It drifts slightly at the high end, but 400°C is rarely needed for hobbyist work.
Power Source Flexibility
- USB-C PD power bank (65W): Works perfectly. A 20,000mAh bank lasts about 3-4 hours of intermittent use.
- MacBook charger (61W): Works. Grounded, so no issues with sensitive boards.
- Phone charger (18W): Powers on but takes longer to heat and struggles to maintain temperature during heavy soldering. Use 45W+.
Real Soldering Session
Over a 2-hour session of building a custom mechanical keyboard:
- Through-hole soldering: Flawless. Plenty of thermal mass.
- SMD 0805 components: Easy with the fine tip.
- Ground plane pads: Handled it well, though large copper pours needed a temperature bump to 370°C.
- Desoldering with wick: Worked fine at 330°C.
What’s Actually Impressive
The Tip Ecosystem
Despite being a “clone,” the tip ecosystem is now solid. You can get conical, chisel, knife, bevel, and even hot-tweezer tips. Tips cost $2-5 each — a fraction of what name-brand cartridge tips cost.
Open-Source Firmware
Many of these irons run Ralim’s open-source IronOS firmware (or compatible forks). This means:
- Custom temperature curves
- Motion-detection auto-sleep (lowers temp when idle, cools down when put in stand)
- Boost mode for stubborn joints
- Detailed calibration options
Portability Changes the Game
I’ve used it for:
- Quick fixes at my desk without dragging out the soldering station
- Helping a friend assemble a keyboard at their apartment
- Emergency car stereo wiring repair (with a power bank)
The Caveats
- Brand ambiguity is real — The exact same iron is sold under 15+ brand names. Quality between batches can vary. Check recent reviews for the specific listing.
- Not grounded by default — When powered from a power bank, the iron tip floats. For ESD-sensitive components, use a grounded USB-C charger.
- The stand is barely adequate — It’s a bent piece of metal. It works, but a silicone rest would be safer.
- Not for production use — If you solder 8 hours a day, get a proper station with sleep/stand functionality built into the stand.
The China Design Angle
The TS100 (and its many derivatives) is a fascinating case study in open-source hardware evolution. The original design came from the open-source community, Chinese manufacturers iterated on it, and now you can buy fully-assembled versions for under $20 shipped globally. It’s a pattern we’re seeing across tools, audio gear, and gadgets: open-source core + Shenzhen manufacturing = incredible value.
Who Should Buy It?
Perfect for:
- Hobbyists and makers who solder occasionally
- Anyone tight on desk space
- People who do repairs in multiple locations
- Budget-conscious beginners who want a real temperature-controlled iron
Skip it if:
- You do production soldering daily
- You work primarily with ESD-sensitive components (or invest in a grounded setup)
- You prefer a traditional station with integrated stand and sponge
Verdict
Novelty Score: 88/100 — For $17, this is one of the best value tools I’ve ever tested. The heat-up speed, temperature accuracy, and portability genuinely improve the soldering experience. Just buy from a listing with good recent reviews.