This seems to be a big problem on most sites. A group of people come up with a way that works, and others post saying, " Your process doesn't work, I used a different paper than you did,and a different board prep method but I did it just like you said, and it doesn't work"
It seems that most people that use magazine paper, scotchbrite and alcohol have good results.
Is it because the magazine paper is "free" that people think it won't work? I guess it comes down to free and expensive expensive wins. Even if it isn't as good!
cary
--- On Sun, 4/18/10, Kerry Wentworth <kwentworth@...> wrote:
From: Kerry Wentworth <kwentworth@...>
Subject: Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Toner transfer problems
To: Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sunday, April 18, 2010, 7:37 PM
A couple of ideas.
1) Try magazine paper
2) Use 00 steel wool or scotchbrite to scrub the board, not 150 sandpaper.
I use a laminator now, but when I ironed, it was 4 to 5 minutes, not 2.
Let us know how it works out for you.
Kerry
andrewmv@ymail. com wrote:
> I've just started attempting my first PCBs with the toner transfer method, and I'm consistently getting terrible results.
>
> Some sections of the pattern transfer flawlessly to the board, while others stay on the paper. I've tried varying heat, pressure, and ironing time, but my results are always similar.
>
> It never seems to be the same parts of the pattern that come though, but I never get the whole thing.
>
> My current process is:
>
> 1) Print the patterns in black toner on medium-gloss photo paper with a Dell 5310n laser printer at my office.
> 2) Scour the board blank in two orthogonal directions with 150 grit sandpaper
> 3) Clean the board blank with pure acetone
> 4) Preheat the board to about 150 degrees Fahrenheit with an electric clothes iron. I'm measuring with a handheld infrared HVAC thermometer.
> 5) With the iron at about 400 degrees, I place the pattern toner-side down on the board, and apply pressure with the iron. The pattern almost immediately fuses to the copper, as I've seen suggested it should, and I move the iron around the pattern regularly, applying a least two full minutes of heat and pressure to every part of the board.
> 6) I immediately place the board and paper into a bowl of hot water, and let it soak for 10-20 minutes.
>
> I've tried variations on this...I initially skipped the scouring, cleaning, or preheating the board. I've tried using mild pressure all the way up to my full body weight. None of these significantly improved or worsened results.
>
> I tried letting the board fully cool before placing it into COLD water, as I've seen suggested, and found that there was virtually no toner transfer whatsoever.
>
> Any tips or ideas?
>
>
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