Here is the update regarding Nickel Print - NO SUCCESS
So I went ahead and bought a jar of "Nickel print" - 13$ - all good till I open the jar - completely dried out. So I use some paint tinner and leave the thing to melt for about 3 days. I guess was just plain bad luck I got this really old evaporated stuff.
After 3 days I finally got something that resembled nail polish - hmm not bad!!! So I etch one my ARM breakout boards. I use Stellaris LM3S308 MCU - which is a 48 LQFP package with 0.5 pitch (yes I solder these by hand :)). The board has about 15 vias that are pretty big - 50mils pad and 10mil holes.
First I drilled the holes (carbide at 35K RPM)... then I scotch taped the board both sides (it is a double sided board) and deburred all holes (same drill at only 5K RPM). This has left me with all 15 via holes punched thorough the scotch tape and very clean.I checked each one a microscope so I can say all were very clean.
Then smudged a blob of nickel print and squeegeed the stuff around the board till was dripping on the other side. While I was doing this the nickel has started to dry already (nothing abnormal yet but this does dry very fast).
Vacuum the board on the other side.
Then "baked" at around 90C for 30min.
Took the board out.. and did some continuity testing. Surprise .. ABSOLUTE FAILURE !!! from 15 holes only 2 were conductive.
Now, either I am doing something wrong either the Nikel Print is a advertising hype "by MG Chemichals" :)) . Or my Nikel was bad ... I mean too old.
Do you guys have any other idea? I have nickel left so I can try some other technique.
C
--- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, Athar Kaludi <ceo_premium@...> wrote:
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> Calin
> Go ahead with Nickel print as trial if you can afford.
> Conductive paints work as the word specify. Your purpose will solve, but only for prototyping purpose
> What i mean by saying this is that the time required in conducting each hole takes your hours of effort, but you learn a lot more for future.
> I am sure that you have that much energy which drives you to ready your prototype. That's the result you are waiting for. Good Luck
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> Athar Kaludi
> Premium PCB Manufacturing
> Pakistan
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> --- On Fri, 7/30/10, morarcalin <morarcalin@...> wrote:
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> From: morarcalin <morarcalin@...>
> Subject: [Homebrew_PCBs] Nickel and Silver Print from MG for through hole plating
> To: Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com
> Date: Friday, July 30, 2010, 11:41 AM
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> MG Chemicals has two conductive prints that they claim can be used for hole plating. Like I said "they claim" :)) ... so no idea if they really work. That's why I am asking first.
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> One of them is Nickel Print (around 11$ for 3/4oz) and second is Silver Print (around 35$ for 3/4oz). The difference is in the conductivity, obviously the nickel one being less conductive. MG is saying that they can be used for hole plating.
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> I am curious if anyone has tried any these two? If it really works for sure will make life a lot easier for DYI-ers like us.
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> I think using first the nickel one to "pre-plate" and then electroplate or just thin plate with liquid tin to make the soldering work better may do the trick ..... I am not talking doing production work, just to get prototyping easier.
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> Calin
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