Chip with simple program for Toy

shaggy_hitman@hotmail.com wrote:


A spam with a Ponzi scheme. posted from:


Search results for: 142.162.152.180


OrgName: Stentor National Integrated Communications Network
OrgID: STEN
Address: 110 O'Connor St., Floor 3
City: Ottawa
StateProv: ON
PostalCode: K1P-IH1
Country: CA

NetRange: 142.162.0.0 - 142.162.255.255
CIDR: 142.162.0.0/16
NetName: STENTOR4
NetHandle: NET-142-162-0-0-1
Parent: NET-142-0-0-0-0
NetType: Direct Assignment
NameServer: OPAL.NBNET.NB.CA
NameServer: ONYX.NBNET.NB.CA
Comment:
RegDate: 1992-08-26
Updated: 2003-10-21

RAbuseHandle: ABUSE24-ARIN
RAbuseName: Abuse Contact
RAbusePhone: +1-506-694-6270
RAbuseEmail: abuse@aliant.net

RNOCHandle: ZA161-ARIN
RNOCName: Aliant Telecom
RNOCPhone: +1-506-694-6270
RNOCEmail: hostmaster@aliant.ca

RTechHandle: ZA161-ARIN
RTechName: Aliant Telecom
RTechPhone: +1-506-694-6270
RTechEmail: hostmaster@aliant.ca

OrgTechHandle: ZS74-ARIN
OrgTechName: Stentor National IntegratedCommunications Network
OrgTechPhone: +1-613-781-9095
OrgTechEmail: stentornet.admin@bell.ca

# ARIN WHOIS database, last updated 2006-03-20 19:10
# Enter ? for additional hints on searching ARIN's WHOIS database.


--
Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to
prove it.
Member of DAV #85.

Michael A. Terrell
Central Florida
 
On Tue, 21 Mar 2006 13:15:45 -0600 in sci.electronics.basics,
"Abstract Dissonance" <Abstract.Dissonance@hotmail.com> wrote,
Is there a freeware windows port analyzer that basicaly just lets you
"record" the data off the parallel or serial port? (even if it just dumps it
to a file it would be ok but ofcourse I'd rather have more functionality)
There is no electronics question in your post!
A better newsgroup would be: alt.comp.freeware
 
On Wednesday, in article
<dvq4g3$3g8$1@nwrdmz01.dmz.ncs.ea.ibs-infra.bt.com>
techie_alison@yahoo.co.uk "techie_alison" wrote:
"Paul Carpenter" <paul$@pcserviceselectronics.co.uk> wrote in message
news:20060321.1948.315810snz@pcserviceselectronics.co.uk...

From the board file the board is 23 x 33mm, other assumptions correct.
However remember because you have surface mount and plate through
components
you have TWO different solder masks (one for each side). The solder mask
is what gives the board the green colour.

What I'm really trying to do is to get as many for as little ?? as possible.
I guess the silkscreen (lettering) could go, not important. We were paying
about ?80 for about 100 of those boards in 2 weeks or so. I've put this
to the 4 companies I've emailed.

Well I did a quick check on <http://www.pcbpool.com/> and min order qty
with panelling up they would supply 13 boards per panel 1dm2.

Ordering as Double sided prototype quantities, with NO solder mask, and
just ident and 13 boards to a panel. A quick quote of 8 panels (8 * 13 =
104 boards), and post shipping on EIGHT days turnaround is 69.93 Euros
..........
For what your board is I would consider both sides solder mask for assembly
process as you have tracks between pins, and top side ident so add 34 Euros
to give

103.93 Euros or 71.94 pounds for 104 boards

slightly cheaper than what you had before.

Give them your VAT number and you then remove the Irish VAT rate of 21%
from that and gives a total of

85.89 Euros or 59.46 pounds for 104 boards

That is a LOT cheaper than what you had before and straight from an Eagle
file you transmit electronically.

If you want faster turnaround then you pay more.
......

Wow Paul, I think I love you :) Not quite appropriate on here but hey I'm
happy, these figures are brilliant. Best quote I managed today was ?160 or
so.
That's the best 'payment' I have had for advice, even in a newsgroup :-^

Will get back into this over the next few days as in hospital on Thursday
and planning to nail this on the head while I recover.

Thanks, will read this properly tomorrow, will likely start a new thread on
it.
Get Hospital over first! Then nail this.

I am sure plenty of people will help out, if you have any further questions.

--
Paul Carpenter | paul@pcserviceselectronics.co.uk
<http://www.pcserviceselectronics.co.uk/> PC Services
<http://www.gnuh8.org.uk/> GNU H8 & mailing list info
<http://www.badweb.org.uk/> For those web sites you hate
 
On 21 Mar 2006 19:51:10 GMT,
pbdelete@spamnuke.ludd.luthdelete.se.invalid wrote:

DecaturTxCowboy <forgetit@bummer.com> wrote:
pbdelete@spamnuke.ludd.luthdelete.se.invalid wrote:
I just had a thought.. if pcb's are made by exposeing them to UV light.
Followed etch bath. Could sunlight later on compromise the pcb .. ?

No. The UV sensitivity is only during the manufacturing process. Once
the board is etched, sunlight is not a problem.

Eg when the conductive layer (copper) is exposed to the etch fluid. It will
harden in such way it become uv-resistent ..?
No.

The bare copper-clad board is coated with a photosensitive material.
A film containing the required copper pattern is placed over the
board, then the combination is exposed to UV light. The board is then
"developed" to remove the unexposed coating, leaving the desired
copper protected by the exposed coating. The board is then etched to
remove the unwanted copper, and finally cleaned to remove the
remaining photosensitive coating, so you can solder to the copper.

In commercial processing, I think the photosensitive coating is
removed over the wanted copper, which is then plated with tin, which
will protect that copper during etching.

Copper itself is not light-sensitive.


--
Peter Bennett VE7CEI
email: peterbb4 (at) interchange.ubc.ca
GPS and NMEA info and programs: http://vancouver-webpages.com/peter/index.html
Newsgroup new user info: http://vancouver-webpages.com/nnq
 
"David Harmon" <source@netcom.com> wrote in message
news:44458044.13778906@news.east.earthlink.net...
On Tue, 21 Mar 2006 13:15:45 -0600 in sci.electronics.basics,
"Abstract Dissonance" <Abstract.Dissonance@hotmail.com> wrote,
Is there a freeware windows port analyzer that basicaly just lets you
"record" the data off the parallel or serial port? (even if it just dumps
it
to a file it would be ok but ofcourse I'd rather have more functionality)

There is no electronics question in your post!
A better newsgroup would be: alt.comp.freeware
um... and are you the sci.electronics.basic police?
 
<pbdelete@spamnuke.ludd.luthdelete.se.invalid> wrote in message
news:44205b11$0$486$cc7c7865@news.luth.se...
Abstract Dissonance <Abstract.Dissonance@hotmail.com> wrote:
Is there a freeware windows port analyzer that basicaly just lets you
"record" the data off the parallel or serial port? (even if it just dumps
it
to a file it would be ok but ofcourse I'd rather have more functionality)

If you used bsd-unix you could get away with:

#include <stdio.h
#include <fcntl.h
#include <sys/types.h
#include <machine/cpufunc.h
#include <dev/ppbus/ppbconf.h

int main(int ac, char *av[]) {
int io_fd;
char *io_devname="/dev/io";

if( (io_fd=open(io_devname,O_RDWR)) !=-1 ) {
for(;;) {
printf("0x%02X\n", inb( 0x378+2 ) );
}
}
return 0;
}
Well, unfortunate/fortunately I use windows ;/

Jon
 
On Tue, 21 Mar 2006 13:15:45 -0600, "Abstract Dissonance"
<Abstract.Dissonance@hotmail.com> wrote:

Is there a freeware windows port analyzer that basicaly just lets you
"record" the data off the parallel or serial port? (even if it just dumps it
to a file it would be ok but ofcourse I'd rather have more functionality)
Google for portmon.zip, which is freeware.
 
On Tue, 21 Mar 2006 17:58:47 -0600 in sci.electronics.basics,
"Abstract Dissonance" <Abstract.Dissonance@hotmail.com> wrote,
A better newsgroup would be: alt.comp.freeware

um... and are you the sci.electronics.basic police?
Only if you usually need the police to help you find your way
around.
 
"Ryan" <quakeserver149@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:8p3Uf.633827$084.574836@attbi_s22...
I'm trying to learn about pressure transducers and I've learned a tiny
bit on the web, but not found it as fruitful as I had hoped. (Or I just
don't understand what to look for.)

Do they permit air to pass through them, or only into them, like a
pressure tank?

Is their output linear with pressure throughout its rated range? If the
transducer is good from 0-30 psi, then does the output range from
something like 0 to 30 volts? When their max rated pressure is reached
and then exceeded, does the output stop changing? Is it accurate to say
the transducer is saturated?

Would the power supply in this example need to be 30 volts? Does the
supply need to be steady? If the supply fluctuates, does that throw off
the measurement? If the supply is noisy DC, does this throw off the
measurement?

It seems like they are always zero to X psi rating. Can the same
transducer measure vaccuum too? If I want to guage -20 psi up to 40
psi, can this be done with a single transducer? If not, is there a such
thing as using two transducers to measure this range and to install one
of them backwards?

Thank you.
Go here and look around.

http://www.emersonprocess.com/rosemount/products/pressure/m3051.html

The pressure transducer usually just has air to pass into them.
The output can be made almost any way. As you did not state what you wanted
to do, the output in many cases is a 4 to 20 miliamp circuit.
The output will saturate when the maximum range is exceeded. They may
overrange a small percentage. That is if the rated output is for 20 psi
then it may go to 21 psi.
There are transducers that can be ranged from negative presure (gauge) to a
positive pressure.
BTW you can not get -20 psi. Around 14.7 psig is as low as you can get.
That would be zero pressure absolute.
 
Abstract Dissonance wrote:
um... and are you the sci.electronics.basic police?

Someone points you to what they beleive is a better place to ask your
question and you attack them? What a guy.


--
Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to
prove it.
Member of DAV #85.

Michael A. Terrell
Central Florida
 
Ryan wrote:
I'm trying to learn about pressure transducers and I've learned a tiny
bit on the web, but not found it as fruitful as I had hoped. (Or I just
don't understand what to look for.)

Do they permit air to pass through them, or only into them, like a
pressure tank?
Into or onto them. Some are made like a plug that fits in a pipe
threaded hole. Some measure the difference between atmospheric
pressure and applied pressure, some measure absolute pressure (have a
vacuum on the back of the sensing diaphragm). Some have two ports, so
they can measure the difference of two arbitrary pressures.

Is their output linear with pressure throughout its rated range?
Some are linearized, some produce an output directly from a strain gauge.

If the
transducer is good from 0-30 psi, then does the output range from
something like 0 to 30 volts?
There are many types.

When their max rated pressure is reached
and then exceeded, does the output stop changing?
Most have some over range with reduced accuracy (or some sort of
saturation) that doesn't damage the sensor.

Is it accurate to say
the transducer is saturated?
When additional pressure produces no additional output change, it is
saturated.

Would the power supply in this example need to be 30 volts?
There are many types that operate from a wide range of supply
voltages. Some regulate the current when a voltage is applied
(current loop operated transmitter).

Does the supply need to be steady?
Some do, some don't.

If the supply fluctuates, does that throw off
the measurement?
See above.

If the supply is noisy DC, does this throw off the
measurement?
There is always at least a little bleed through from the supply. How
much is a specification (power supply rejection).

It seems like they are always zero to X psi rating.
It may seem like that, but it is not the case, especially for the two
port types.

Can the same transducer measure vaccuum too?
Some can. The absolute pressure types certainly can. A perfect
vacuum is just their zero scale point.

If I want to guage -20 psi up to 40
psi, can this be done with a single transducer?
With the right one, sure.

If not, is there a such
thing as using two transducers to measure this range and to install one
of them backwards?
Not the best way to do it, but possible.
 
On Tue, 21 Mar 2006 18:51:06 -0600, "Abstract Dissonance"
<Abstract.Dissonance@hotmail.com> wrote:

"Si Ballenger" <shb*NO*SPAM*@comporium.net> wrote in message
news:44209280.355656807@news.comporium.net...
On Tue, 21 Mar 2006 13:15:45 -0600, "Abstract Dissonance"
Abstract.Dissonance@hotmail.com> wrote:

Is there a freeware windows port analyzer that basicaly just lets you
"record" the data off the parallel or serial port? (even if it just dumps
it
to a file it would be ok but ofcourse I'd rather have more functionality)

Google for portmon.zip, which is freeware.

I tried that but for some reason it didn't work ;/ I'm not sure if it works
for raw bits or what?


Basically I am trying to dump a serial data line to the parallel port and
read it almost like a logical analyzer. This way I can make sure some
devices are working right and such... The only thing that seems to work is
parmon but it doesn't log the data ;/

Jon
Below is the portmon output for a program called jbasic.exe with
the Tx and Rx lines connected together on the com1 port. In this
case the jbasic program sent "hello world" (displayed in hex) to
com1 and then read the com1 input buffer picking up the "hello
world". The lines are probably word wrapped. You may need to have
a device connected to the parallel port for it to see the traffic
there. To setup portmon you have to go to "computer" and select
local, then go to "capture" and select the ports to monitor.
Check the help file for other setup and logging options and such.

0 0.00009191 jbasic.exe IRP_MJ_CREATE Serial0
SUCCESS Options: Open
1 0.00002486 jbasic.exe
IOCTL_SERIAL_SET_QUEUE_SIZE Serial0 SUCCESS InSize: 8192
OutSize: 8192
2 0.00000531 jbasic.exe
IOCTL_SERIAL_GET_BAUD_RATE Serial0 SUCCESS
3 0.00000363 jbasic.exe
IOCTL_SERIAL_GET_LINE_CONTROL Serial0 SUCCESS
4 0.00000307 jbasic.exe IOCTL_SERIAL_GET_CHARS
Serial0 SUCCESS
5 0.00000279 jbasic.exe IOCTL_SERIAL_GET_HANDFLOW
Serial0 SUCCESS
6 0.00001509 jbasic.exe
IOCTL_SERIAL_SET_BAUD_RATE Serial0 SUCCESS Rate: 9600
7 0.00000950 jbasic.exe IOCTL_SERIAL_SET_RTS
Serial0 SUCCESS
8 0.00000950 jbasic.exe IOCTL_SERIAL_CLR_DTR
Serial0 SUCCESS
9 0.00000922 jbasic.exe
IOCTL_SERIAL_SET_LINE_CONTROL Serial0 SUCCESS StopBits: 1
Parity: NONE WordLength: 8
10 0.00000698 jbasic.exe IOCTL_SERIAL_SET_CHAR
Serial0 SUCCESS EOF:0 ERR:0 BRK:0 EVT:0 XON:0 XOFF:0
11 0.00000894 jbasic.exe IOCTL_SERIAL_SET_HANDFLOW
Serial0 SUCCESS Shake:0 Replace:40 XonLimit:0 XoffLimit:0
12 0.00004945 jbasic.exe IRP_MJ_WRITE Serial0
SUCCESS Length 1: 68
13 0.00102639 jbasic.exe IRP_MJ_WRITE Serial0
SUCCESS Length 1: 65
14 0.00090682 jbasic.exe IRP_MJ_WRITE Serial0
SUCCESS Length 1: 6C
15 0.00098113 jbasic.exe IRP_MJ_WRITE Serial0
SUCCESS Length 1: 6C
16 0.00098309 jbasic.exe IRP_MJ_WRITE Serial0
SUCCESS Length 1: 6F
17 0.00098085 jbasic.exe IRP_MJ_WRITE Serial0
SUCCESS Length 1: 20
18 0.00098448 jbasic.exe IRP_MJ_WRITE Serial0
SUCCESS Length 1: 77
19 0.00099985 jbasic.exe IRP_MJ_WRITE Serial0
SUCCESS Length 1: 6F
20 0.00005950 jbasic.exe IRP_MJ_WRITE Serial0
SUCCESS Length 1: 72
21 0.00096884 jbasic.exe IRP_MJ_WRITE Serial0
SUCCESS Length 1: 6C
22 0.00092470 jbasic.exe IRP_MJ_WRITE Serial0
SUCCESS Length 1: 64
23 0.00002291 jbasic.exe
IOCTL_SERIAL_GET_COMMSTATUS Serial0 SUCCESS
24 0.00000950 jbasic.exe
IOCTL_SERIAL_GET_COMMSTATUS Serial0 SUCCESS
25 0.00000810 jbasic.exe
IOCTL_SERIAL_GET_COMMSTATUS Serial0 SUCCESS
26 0.00001648 jbasic.exe IRP_MJ_READ Serial0
SUCCESS Length 11: 68 65 6C 6C 6F 20 77 6F 72 6C 64
27 0.00000698 jbasic.exe IRP_MJ_CLEANUP Serial0
SUCCESS
28 0.01878982 jbasic.exe IRP_MJ_CLOSE Serial0
SUCCESS
 
On Tue, 21 Mar 2006 20:31:59 -0600, "Abstract Dissonance"
<Abstract.Dissonance@hotmail.com> wrote:

"JeffM" <jeffm_@email.com> wrote in message
news:1142989502.315575.321510@u72g2000cwu.googlegroups.com...
freeware windows port analyzer ?
Jon (Abstract Dissonance)

http://groups.google.com/group/comp.arch.embedded/browse_frm/thread/ee2df8756faa5f91?q=aspycom+docklight+serial-protocol-analyzer+zzz+free-DOS-analyzers+analysing-*-communication-problems+from-a-Windows-system+serial-or-parallel-ports+portmon+Windows-application+zzzz+5-serial-channels+ComLite32+Windoze-app


I didn't see anything in there about the parallel port ;/ The main thing I
need is a parallel port... Surely there is one out there that works with
it... if not I guess I will have to move to it(but its much more work that
for the parallel port since I have the cables setup for it)
If you are using Win9x you can probably cobble together
some code to read the parallel port directly. WinXP, NT,
and 2K don't allow user-mode access to ports, so you'd need
a special ring 0 driver like GIVEIO or USERPORT.

Unlike serial ports, parallel ports are not clocked devices.
So you will have to decide how often you want to look at
the port. Note that timing is definitely not Windoze strong
suit, so expect a fair amount of jitter and don't expect to
get fine resolution (high sample rate).

The hilarious part of all this, is that the earliest 8088
PC running DOS was orders of magnitude better than
the fastest Windows system for this kind of stuff.

Best regards,


Bob Masta
dqatechATdaqartaDOTcom

D A Q A R T A
Data AcQuisition And Real-Time Analysis
www.daqarta.com
Home of DaqGen, the FREEWARE signal generator
 
"Michael A. Terrell" <mike.terrell@earthlink.net> wrote in message
news:4420D353.FAD5F299@earthlink.net...
Abstract Dissonance wrote:

um... and are you the sci.electronics.basic police?


Someone points you to what they beleive is a better place to ask your
question and you attack them? What a guy.


--
Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to
prove it.
Member of DAV #85.

Michael A. Terrell
Central Florida
hmm, wasn't his first post sorta an attack too?

"There is no electronics question in your post!"

This maybe or may not be true but surely the parallel port is used
indirectly with electronics? I am asking this question simply because I
want to use some electronic devices and monitor there digital outputs... so
indirectly it has everythign to do with electronics... and surely many
people here in "sci.electronics.xxx" has messed with the parallel port in
some fashion or another and probably has had the need to monitor/log the
port?

The fact is this is probably the best place to ask this question since it is
directly used for an electronics application... I could be wrong but he
obviously thought that my OP didn't belong in here and he had to point it
out.

He could have said something like

"You might find better luck asing in blah.blah".

Cause basicaly he's implying that I'm asking something that is completely
off base in this group, which I think it isn't.

And I seriously doubt I would get any answeres in alt.comp.freeware that I
couldn't get googling.
 
"Bob Masta" <NoSpam@daqarta.com> wrote in message
news:44214ffc.1616728@news.itd.umich.edu...
On Tue, 21 Mar 2006 20:31:59 -0600, "Abstract Dissonance"
Abstract.Dissonance@hotmail.com> wrote:


"JeffM" <jeffm_@email.com> wrote in message
news:1142989502.315575.321510@u72g2000cwu.googlegroups.com...
freeware windows port analyzer ?
Jon (Abstract Dissonance)

http://groups.google.com/group/comp.arch.embedded/browse_frm/thread/ee2df8756faa5f91?q=aspycom+docklight+serial-protocol-analyzer+zzz+free-DOS-analyzers+analysing-*-communication-problems+from-a-Windows-system+serial-or-parallel-ports+portmon+Windows-application+zzzz+5-serial-channels+ComLite32+Windoze-app


I didn't see anything in there about the parallel port ;/ The main thing I
need is a parallel port... Surely there is one out there that works with
it... if not I guess I will have to move to it(but its much more work that
for the parallel port since I have the cables setup for it)


If you are using Win9x you can probably cobble together
some code to read the parallel port directly. WinXP, NT,
and 2K don't allow user-mode access to ports, so you'd need
a special ring 0 driver like GIVEIO or USERPORT.

Unlike serial ports, parallel ports are not clocked devices.
So you will have to decide how often you want to look at
the port. Note that timing is definitely not Windoze strong
suit, so expect a fair amount of jitter and don't expect to
get fine resolution (high sample rate).

The hilarious part of all this, is that the earliest 8088
PC running DOS was orders of magnitude better than
the fastest Windows system for this kind of stuff.

Best regards,
I'm just doing this for the keyboard so I just need it to run from 10khz to
20khz. Its not clocked but if the application could use one port for the
clock to sample another port then it should work? Or even just set the
speed at which to sample?

Basicaly what I want to do is hook the keyboard up to the parallel port and
then hit keys and read the data being sent. I have the parallel port all
setup to do this easy but it looks like I'm going to have to do it with a
serial port since that seems to be the only one with the extensive
applications.

Bob Masta
dqatechATdaqartaDOTcom

D A Q A R T A
Data AcQuisition And Real-Time Analysis
www.daqarta.com
Home of DaqGen, the FREEWARE signal generator
Thanks,
Jon
 
bb wrote:
hi......
im trying to interface a 4x4 matrix keypad using a 74c922 decoder to an
Atmel micrcontroller ...in c- programm.......

i would appreciate some pointers in how to create d source code that will
read from the output of the decoder...according to key pressed...


thxs
bb
Hi, bb. Assuming you're using external caps for the oscillator and the
keybounce mask, all you have to do is set your keycheck loop so it
happens at least twice during the component-selected debounce period.

Check for Data Available. If it's high, read the keypress data, then
set a software flag. Don't read data while the flag is set. Wait for
Data Available to be low again before resetting the flag. Read data
again when flag is reset and Data Available is high.

If you don't need to tri-state the '922 data outputs, that's the
easiest way. If you have bussed the data, clear the bus and then
toggle output enable to read the data as above. It's all in the data
sheet, available at the Fairchild Semiconductor website.

http://www.fairchildsemi.com/pf/MM/MM74C922.html

If this isn't an exercise in programming, though, the 74C922 is an
expensive way to do this job. If your code is so bound up that you
need a dedicated part to do keypad debounce, it might be better to get
another small uC to do this job at less cost and fewer pins (data can
also be sent from one uC to the other in serial format). You can also
have n-key rollover instead of just 2-key quite easily.

There's no law that says you can't have more than one uC on a board.

Good luck
Chris
 
pbdelete@spamnuke.ludd.luthdelete.se.invalid wrote:
I figured that out, but the science is in the details =)
I brainstorming on a solution to speed up the process.

What part of what process?
 
On Wed, 22 Mar 2006 07:48:05 -0600, "Abstract Dissonance"
<Abstract.Dissonance@hotmail.com> wrote:


I'm just doing this for the keyboard so I just need it to run from 10khz to
20khz. Its not clocked but if the application could use one port for the
clock to sample another port then it should work? Or even just set the
speed at which to sample?

Basicaly what I want to do is hook the keyboard up to the parallel port and
then hit keys and read the data being sent. I have the parallel port all
setup to do this easy but it looks like I'm going to have to do it with a
serial port since that seems to be the only one with the extensive
applications.
If you have a win95/98 machine, you might check the software at
the below site. It is for recording IR signals from remote
controls for replay using the parallel port. It won't work well
with win NT/2K/XP. You might be able to use a similar setup to
record the output from the keyboard. You probably could make a
similar recording setup using qbasic, but actual timing
measurement would be dependent on the speed of the computer.

http://www.ziplabel.com/cir/index.html
 
pbdelete@spamnuke.ludd.luthdelete.se.invalid wrote:
DJ Delorie <dj@delorie.com> wrote:

The etch *mask* is UV sensitive. After etching, the remaining mask is
cleaned off, leaving just copper. Copper is not UV sensitive.

That makes sense. Are there other cleaning methods than Etanol or Isopropanol
that does a significantly better job ..?
Not sure what you mean by "significantly better job". What ever method
you use, as long as it cleans it off, its suitable. Do you mean is there
a faster way?

If doing a small batch by hand, use a minimally abrasive sponge rated
for TeflonŽ cookware. As I recall, the commercial process uses a high
pressure solvent wash (but I stand to be corrected on that).
 
DecaturTxCowboy <forgetit@bummer.com> wrote:
pbdelete@spamnuke.ludd.luthdelete.se.invalid wrote:
I figured that out, but the science is in the details =)
I brainstorming on a solution to speed up the process.

What part of what process?
I want a "print pcb" machine ;)
 

Welcome to EDABoard.com

Sponsor

Back
Top