OT: how big would it be? - PCBs at home

From: Pete Turnbull <pete_at_dunnington.u-net.com>
Date: Sun Oct 24 12:38:49 1999

On Oct 23, 19:15, Tony Duell wrote:

> We found that toner didn't stick that well to acetate film, and that we
> often ended up with gaps in tracks, etc. Amazingly, printing onto _paper_
> and giving it a very long exposure in the UV box helped a lot. Sounds
> crazy, but I've got the boards to prove it :-)

I find drafting film is best - but make sure you get the type that
withstands the heat of a laserprinter or photocopier :-)

> Many components can be soldered on both sides (Turned-pin IC sockets help
> here, but I use nothing else anyway). For those that can't I use the
> proper track pins. The PTH 'repair' kits are out of this world when it
> comes to prices...

I don't like soldering components on both sides, because it makes
modifications/repairs harder later. For special purposes, I do sometimes
use pins extracted from turned-pin sockets, though, and I don't mind
soldering those on both sides.

> There's always the good old HP plotter with a metal-tipped pen onto film.
> Takes a bit of fiddling, and it's slow, but it works. And it's a _lot_
> cheaper to find an old HP A3 (or larger) plotter than a similar
laserprinter.

I forgot about that one -- silly, because in a previous job, we used to do
that quite a lot.

> For small board (<A4), a laserprinter seems to be the way to go for the
> hobbyist. Pick up an old CX or SX engined machine and rebuild it (this
> _is_ classiccmp, after all) :-)...

Yup. And the older engines often seem to be better for this sort of
purpose than the newer ones.

-- 
Pete						Peter Turnbull
						Dept. of Computer Science
						University of York
Received on Sun Oct 24 1999 - 12:38:49 BST

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