1. High-Temperature Electric Furnace Brazing
    • Used for soft brazing of small, simple, or very thin parts.
  2. Wave Soldering
    • Used for mass assembly of printed circuit boards (PCBs) and electronic components.
    • During soldering, molten solder at around 250 °C forms a wave under pump pressure, and the workpiece passes through the wave to achieve soldering.
    • This method is highly productive and suitable for automated production lines.
  3. Flame Brazing
    • Uses a flame generated by burning a combustible gas with oxygen or compressed air as the heat source.
    • Equipment is simple and easy to operate; multiple flames can be used simultaneously depending on the workpiece shape.
    • Suitable for medium and small components such as bicycle frames and aluminum kettle spouts.
  4. Dipping Brazing
    • The workpiece, partially or entirely, is immersed in a brazing bath covered with flux or in a molten salt bath for heating and brazing.
    • Provides uniform, rapid heating with precise temperature control, suitable for large-scale production and large components.
    • The salts in the bath are usually composed of flux; post-brazing cleaning is labor-intensive due to residual flux.
  5. Vacuum Furnace Induction Brazing
    • Uses high-frequency, medium-frequency, or power-frequency induction currents as the heat source.
    • High-frequency heating is suitable for thin-walled tubes.
    • Coaxial cables and split-type induction coils allow brazing at sites away from the power source, especially for large components like removable pipe joints on rockets.
  6. Furnace Brazing
    • Assembled workpieces with brazing filler are heated in a furnace, often with flux and sometimes under protective reducing or inert gas.
    • Provides relatively uniform heating; continuous furnaces can be used for mass production.
  7. Vacuum Brazing
    • The workpiece is heated inside a vacuum chamber.
    • Mainly used for high-quality products and materials that are prone to oxidation.