save your few dollars- use glossy magazine paper- don't worry if it is
printed upon already. This material works great, disolves great-
overall great results! found out the hard way./jd
--- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "Thomas D. Kask" <tdkask@...> wrote:
>
> I have been reading the posts as they come across my email for a few
> weeks now hoping to get more insight on this process. I have
> accomplished TT PCBs with mediocre results in the past using online
> guides from across the internet. I believe my biggest hindrance has been
> using a paper poorly suited. As I read here there seem to be lots of
> "what not to dos, but I haven't gotten a very concise concept of what
> does work consistently well and is readily available today. What paper
> or transparency can I go out and purchase today at Wal-Mart, CompUSA,
> Office Max/Office Depot (No Staples here) or similar store common in
> south-eastern US? I get good clear detailed lines on my print, just bad
> transfers, mostly no transferring completely, resulting in pitted toner
> images transferred to my CC board.
>
>
>
> Hope you guys can suggest some commonly available local sources for good
> TT paper or transparency.
>
>
>
> Thanks.
>
> tdkask
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>