Making pcbs at home

T

Tigers1

Guest
Gudday all

I have artwork for 2 small PCBs as a photocopy/printout. I have been
trying to get the circuits onto single sided board via the Techniks
material (www.techniks.com) so that I may etch but without success.
Is any one familiar with this product i.e. had success with it?
Is there another method or products out there that I might be able to use?

--
Posted at www.usenet.com.au
 
Tigers1 wrote:
Gudday all

I have artwork for 2 small PCBs as a photocopy/printout. I have been
trying to get the circuits onto single sided board via the Techniks
material (www.techniks.com) so that I may etch but without success.
Is any one familiar with this product i.e. had success with it?
Is there another method or products out there that I might be able to use?

Press-n-peel PCB transfer film,
various suppliers including Jaycar
Bit finicky about which brand of inkjet you use
 
F Murtz <haggisz@hotmail.com> wrote:

Tigers1 wrote:
Gudday all

I have artwork for 2 small PCBs as a photocopy/printout. I have been
trying to get the circuits onto single sided board via the Techniks
material (www.techniks.com) so that I may etch but without success.
Is any one familiar with this product i.e. had success with it?
Is there another method or products out there that I might be able to use?



Press-n-peel PCB transfer film,
various suppliers including Jaycar
Bit finicky about which brand of inkjet you use
Inkjet? I've never used the stuff, but I thought a laser-printed image
was needed for use with Press-n-Peel.

I have had reasonable success over the years with positive-acting
photoresist. I have used pre-coated boards like those made by
Kinsten, spray on coatings like Positiv 20 or PRP200, or even stuff
applied with a brush.


Andy Wood
woodag@trap.ozemail.com.au
 
On 30/1/2011 9:36 PM, Tigers1 wrote:
Gudday all

I have artwork for 2 small PCBs as a photocopy/printout. I have been
trying to get the circuits onto single sided board via the Techniks
material (www.techniks.com) so that I may etch but without success.
Is any one familiar with this product i.e. had success with it?
Is there another method or products out there that I might be able to use?

At a price of about $1.00 per sq in, and a setup charge of $10.00, I
would never bother to make PCBs at home again.

See http://batchpcb.com/index.php/Products

--
Regards,

Adrian Jansen adrianjansen at internode dot on dot net
Note reply address is invalid, convert address above to machine form.
 
Andy Wood wrote:

Press-n-peel PCB transfer film,
various suppliers including Jaycar
Bit finicky about which brand of inkjet you use

Inkjet? I've never used the stuff, but I thought a laser-printed image
was needed for use with Press-n-Peel.
I tthought you needed to apply heat (iron on( the laser printed stuff.
>
 
terryc wrote:
Andy Wood wrote:


Press-n-peel PCB transfer film,
various suppliers including Jaycar
Bit finicky about which brand of inkjet you use

Inkjet? I've never used the stuff, but I thought a laser-printed image
was needed for use with Press-n-Peel.

I tthought you needed to apply heat (iron on( the laser printed stuff.

OOPS again, It is a while since I used it, it needs dry toner based
copier,It does not like brother printers (they use higher setting temp
apparently)And you do use an iron.
 
On 2011-01-30, Tigers1 <dGxrbmVsbEBiaWdwb25kLmNvbQ==@REGISTERED_USER_usenet.com.au> wrote:
Gudday all

I have artwork for 2 small PCBs as a photocopy/printout. I have been
trying to get the circuits onto single sided board via the Techniks
material (www.techniks.com) so that I may etch but without success.
Is any one familiar with this product i.e. had success with it?
Is there another method or products out there that I might be able to use?
The general consensus is that press-n-peel is the best brand of
iron-on PCB etch-resist (and you have already found them at
www.techniks.com).

You must get the board shiny-clean, grease-free, and dry before
applying the press-n-peel, also you need to use the correct iron
temperature.

pre-heating the board in an oven can help too.

-
⚂⚃ 100% natural

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F Murtz wrote:
terryc wrote:
Andy Wood wrote:


Press-n-peel PCB transfer film,
various suppliers including Jaycar
Bit finicky about which brand of inkjet you use

Inkjet? I've never used the stuff, but I thought a laser-printed image
was needed for use with Press-n-Peel.

I tthought you needed to apply heat (iron on( the laser printed stuff.

OOPS again, It is a while since I used it, it needs dry toner based
copier,It does not like brother printers (they use higher setting temp
apparently)And you do use an iron.
Tried adjusting te amount of toner upwards for the print?
 
terryc wrote:
F Murtz wrote:
terryc wrote:
Andy Wood wrote:


Press-n-peel PCB transfer film,
various suppliers including Jaycar
Bit finicky about which brand of inkjet you use

Inkjet? I've never used the stuff, but I thought a laser-printed image
was needed for use with Press-n-Peel.

I tthought you needed to apply heat (iron on( the laser printed stuff.

OOPS again, It is a while since I used it, it needs dry toner based
copier,It does not like brother printers (they use higher setting temp
apparently)And you do use an iron.

Tried adjusting te amount of toner upwards for the print?
It worked on the hp copier I used But I remember reading warnings from
several places not to use a brother. You can use some laser faxes I
gather.(not brother)
 
Jasen Betts <jasen@xnet.co.nz> wrote:


The general consensus is that press-n-peel is the best brand of
iron-on PCB etch-resist (and you have already found them at
www.techniks.com).
Is this the blue press n peel that jaycar sells? If so, I did a lot of
testing with it and found it to be quite inconsistent. I then tried
toner transfer paper and had much better results.
 
On 2011-02-03, scatter <scatter@newstap.ipod.au.invalid> wrote:
Jasen Betts <jasen@xnet.co.nz> wrote:


The general consensus is that press-n-peel is the best brand of
iron-on PCB etch-resist (and you have already found them at
www.techniks.com).

Is this the blue press n peel that jaycar sells? If so, I did a lot of
testing with it and found it to be quite inconsistent. I then tried
toner transfer paper and had much better results.
It's good to know that it doesn't work for everyone. Performance must depend
to some extent on the toner used, and possibly environmental factors.
others have had success with kaolin coated newsprint (cheap glossy magazine
and advertising paper) and the backing paper from self-adhesive labels.




--
⚂⚃ 100% natural

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