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I don't what "and such" is.   But for Shrink tubing, I just use a candle.    I have some about 1 inch diameter and 2 inches tall that will sit on my desk.   I just light one and hold the shrink tubing about 1-2 inches above the flame.

I do have a heat gun that will do it very nicely too.   I got mine a harbor freight and it is overkill for small shrink tubing.   I am also just too lazy to dig it out when I need it for a quick job like a shrink.    The candle and box of matches are in my work bench drawer.

I chuckle over all the crazy schemes people employ just to avoid a simple heat gun, all of $10 for a compact one that will work well on the bench.  What is the allure of flames, the side of the soldering iron, etc.  While all will shrink the tubing, and having used all of those techniques, I can honestly say you will get the best results with a plain heat gun.

I chuckle over all the crazy schemes people employ just to avoid a simple heat gun, all of $10 for a compact one that will work well on the bench.  What is the allure of flames, the side of the soldering iron, etc.  While all will shrink the tubing, and having used all of those techniques, I can honestly say you will get the best results with a plain heat gun.

Yeah, but those Tesla flame throwers were really cool.

While all will shrink the tubing, and having used all of those techniques, I can honestly say you will get the best results with a plain heat gun.

Portability (no cord) is a benefit.  I read about grill lighters a while back and keep one near.  I find it very convenient to just grab it without having to reach for the heat gun and drag it and the cord across everything.

I usually need light, Dremel, drill, etc. I always have an extension cord handy.

Batteries!  DeWalt has made a fortune from my 18v and 20v purchases, although I'm really unhappy about my older 18v batteries dying (okay, they are a decade or more old).  Glad they have the 20v to 18v adapter.  And I have to admit my battery Dremel works well for cutting track but not much else.  Have not tried a battery power heat gun yet.

I have a couple of heat guns, but I usually just use my hot air rework tool.  It's right on the bench, and I can dial up any temperature and it has a nice 3/16" nozzle to direct the hot air just where I want it.  I also use it for loosening up hot glue, makes it much easier to remove stubborn spots of glue.

Thanks for reminding me John, I also have a Raychem compressed hot air heat gun, the kind you use on aircraft. It works great. Totally forgot all about it, only use it on big jobs though.

Last edited by Jayhawk500

I’ve tried a variety of techniques, and I have found my heat gun to be the best and to the point for heat shrinking  

My workbench has a power strip on the wall and I find no problem with plugging in my heat gun.
Bam-bam-bam and I’m done.
We can spend a small fortune ‘s on our trains, but why do some people resist buying a cheap heat gun when it’s really designed for the task at hand.

Alan

@RJR posted:

" why do some people resist buying a cheap heat gun when it’s really designed for the task"

Because they don't want to blast the entire area with heat.

Agreed.  Also, frankly I just don't need more limited use tools.  I have many tools that only serve one function, but there is no reasonable substitute and when you need it you need it.  A heat gun isn't like that, I don't need it, it doesn't function any better for me than my small torch or grill lighter and I use both of those for a myriad of other things.

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