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I always thought the "fix" to a traditional soldiering iron was a hot air pencil.
I wonder if you can run it off any USB C PD that will do 100w+ without buying the battery pack. I know my MBP USB C power supply does at least 100, if not more on MagSafe.
USB C PD is a standard so yes, as long as the device you purchase to power it supports 100w PD via USB C then will work.
Why this instead of an industry-standard station like an entry level Weller? The Wellers got replacement parts, especially tips which are consumables. I have the pervious 50W model and it has worked well in any job that can be done with that power level.
In my experience with soldering, the quality of the tip is the most important part. Then the quality of the solder and flux. Then having a set of soldering tools like wick, pump, stripper, and most of all - a third hand. Then temp adjustability. I had a digital solder station before I had those tools and I did almost as shitty solder jobs as I did with the basic Weller soldering iron I had before it. Once I got the ability to keep the parts stable so I can hold the solder in one hand and the iron in the other, introduce the solder at the joint and melt it in-place with the iron, like the manuals say, the quality went way up. I could even do some functional SMD work using my phone's macro cam as a microscope.
I have one of these https://webcat.cornwelltools.com/JP213123-Cornwell%C2%AE-Cordless-Soldering-Iron-p371692246 as well as a traditional wired soldering iron. While I like the cordless soldering iron's portability and it's fine for solder cups or solder splicing wire, it's not adaptable enough for me to use on a PCB or for micro solder and if I'm honest I'd want a micro solder setup for that anyway. I've owned expensive soldering irons and cheap ones (my current corded model I believe is one of ifixit's), the general problem is that I have too many random tips lying around that I don't know which iron they go to. Some are junk (because the iron broke etc). Some probably could be used interchangeably.
At least with the cordless one the tips are replaceable, and pretty unique in appearance so I know exactly which iron they go to.
The problem with the cordless one is the heat it can generate and the fact that it's not adjustable. The problem with the corded one is that I have to lug a 50' extension cord up to every plane to use it, and often there's not a safe place to put it down while it's hot so I have to prep every solder cup, joint, splice etc and then plug it in and turn it on. I've got stands galore and none of them is the safest.
I'd be willing to try this out just for the sake of the added protections it provides.