Acid soldering flux is Zinc Chloride.
It's acidic on the PH scale, but not really an acid
But it will rust very aggressively if not cleared completely from the surfaces after the soldering job is done.
You can make your own by disolving Zinc in Muriatic Acid (Hydrochloric)
Keep adding Zinc till it won't disolve any more of it. Let it set and settle then strain it off into a bottle.
Zinc from (old fashioned?) flashlite batterys, the cup that the batter case is made of is Zinc.
The black powder inside is Manganese Dioxide. That's usefull to add to Nitre Salts to lower the melting point.
Or just splurge and buy some Acid Flux. It does work great, but that after rust issue must be dealt with.
The Paste Flux often has Zinc Chloride in it. So wash the surfaces clear of that as well or they may rust on you
Easy on the heat, don't over heat. Tin at least one surface,,both of you can.
Then flux the mating surfaces again, clamp together and reheat till the solder flows. Tweak the clamp tighter at that point just a little.
The 'Silver Solder' around is still 'soft solder' It's just a Tin/Silver alloy usually 95/5.
But there are variations of that. It's strong, solders easily as lead/tin solder in my experience.
But I stillprefer the50/50 or 60/40 Lead-Tin soft solder as any of it that shows as a soldering joint line will Oxidize pretty quickly and turn a dark grey color.
The Tin/Silver soft solder stays Brite White . A fine silver bright line running up and down a soldered rib to bbl doesn't look very nice no matter how thin it is.
I've done a lot of relaying ribs on SxS's and use Lead/Tin solder.
Plenty strong if you have a good fit betw parts. Don't ask it or any solder to be a crack filler. No strength in that capacity.
Once you have clamped the tinned and fluxed parts together and before heating them, take a soft 'lead' pencil and scribble the metal around the parts. Cover the surfaces with pencil marking. That will be a graphite coating and any excess solder will not attach itself to those surfaces.
Easy cleanup