I'm honestly not sure what the thickness of the board was - I don't still
have the packaging, but I know that the subsequent board I etched in an
etching container was from the same batch.
Also, I used the same bottle of FeCl in both situations.
I suspect I might get better results by heating the etching before sponging,
but most of the howtos I've read indicate that that's not necessary.
Maybe I wasn't using enough pressure? I was trying to be careful to
maintain my Sharpie traces, but now I know that those are a lost cause, and
the toner isn't going anywhere, so I don't need to be so worried about
applying too much pressure.
I'm certain I could probably make the system work with some experimenting,
and I'd be happy to discuss the process I used with anyone who's trying to
troubleshoot where it went wrong. But since it's supposed to be a
convenience shortcut, I'm not personally going to be pursuing it much
further when I already have something that "works for me".
-Andrew
On Fri, Jun 4, 2010 at 9:17 AM, Richard <richard.liberatoscioli@...>wrote:
>
>
> Hi Andrew!
>
> For an normal scrubbed etch time of 1min for 1/2oz and 2mins for 1oz
> copper, it took you 15-20 mins to etch your board? What were you using for
> etching solution ..... "chicken broth"??? : (
>
> In trying any new process, most of the mistakes are made in the first and
> early attempts, you may want to revisit this method as it address many of
> the objectable issues by other means.
>
>
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