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On 2006-12-30, ken scharf wrote:
I've heard of people designing their own pc boards using laser printer output and iron on toner for resit. I've tried this before but with 'bleeding' of the toner during application I don't think I can get better than 50 mil trace separation. Print your design on some kind of clay coated paper (people have used everything from magazine pages to photo paper intended for inkjets) and look at the print with a loupe. Cheap laser printers will produce a result full of pinholes. A nice Xerox will make a good, solid black. I haven't had any trouble with toner melting or running. In fact, once you transfer it onto the PCB it's hard to get off! If I try designing boards for SMT parts I'll probably have to farm them out to a professional house, but this can be expensive for making but one board. (Unless you plan on writing a QST article and selling the extra boards....). You've got to pick the right board house for each order. Some, like batchpcb.com, are particularly cheap if you want few, small boards. They don't have setup fees or even per-board fees, only a per-order charge. But their $2.50/in^2 grows faster than some other places which have bigger minimum size boards/minimum orders. -- Ben Jackson AD7GD http://www.ben.com/ |