simoni@strat.Stanford.EDU (Richard Simoni) (03/15/90)
I just happened across a pretty neat idea for prototyping PC boards in an article in the new (April 1990) issue of Modern Electronics. It uses overhead projector slides WITHOUT the expense of buying photosensitized copper-clad boards or the hassle of sensitizing them yourself. The basic technique is: Photocopy your artwork onto the slide. This deposits toner onto the slide where you want the copper to remain. Put the toner side of the slide against the board. Heat it to 340F using an iron or hotplate to transfer the photocopier toner from the slide to the board. Then simply etch the board in the usual way. Apparently the toner works as a pretty good etchant resist! If you're interested in doing this yourself, I'd recommend getting a copy of the article since the author goes into detail about what transparency films and heating procedures work best. From the photos in the article, it looks like he's on to something good here. Enjoy, Rich Simoni
tommyk@cs.glasgow.ac.uk (Tommy Kelly) (03/16/90)
In article <10181@portia.Stanford.EDU> simoni@strat.stanford.edu writes: > >I just happened across a pretty neat idea for prototyping PC boards in an >article in the new (April 1990) issue of Modern Electronics. It uses >The basic technique is: Photocopy your artwork onto the slide.... How does he avoid the parallax error introduced by the copier? tk -- ================================================================================ Disclaimer: "You can't pin that wrap on me." ================================================================================