Maybe I can give you an additional impression.
As already said, one thin is hobby, and people just like do do something by themselves.
But there really is another important point, even in the professional business:
I agree with you, that in professional business it doesn`t make manx sense to do the boards by yourself, when you compare time / costs etc. between using a service and doing it by yourself. Thats very true for just normal pcb`s.
So why did people buy our Systems? The reason was: they wanted to do something very special, what was either really, really expensive by an external service - like flexible pcbs- or they are doing completely new things, which you dont get anywhere -like etching conductive fabrics.
--- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, windswaytoo@... wrote:
>
> I have been a member of this group for some time and normally read all the posts. I design and build electronics, mostly with embedded controllers. I went thru the stage of making my own PCBs way back
> in the late 1980s and early 1990s. I ran a successful business selling electronic devices then and throughout the 1990s. I switched to commercially made boards around 1993 as it was cost and time effective to do so. I retired around 1998. For the few projects I did for my own interests I used ExpressPCB to do the boards. I am now getting back into business and have taken up EagleCad to do the schematics/board layout stuff. I have begun to use the services of one of the batch businesses, DorkbotPDX, to do my board prototypes. My
> boards are for the Arduino Mega and are 8.4 square inches in area. Dorkbot will make three of these for $42, for $5/sq in, which works out to $14 per board! They offer free shipping in the US and the turn-around is 9-10 days. The boards are two sided, PTH and silkscreening. BTW $10/sq in for 4 layer boards. Check it out
> here:
>
> http://dorkbotpdx.org/wiki/pcb_order
>
> I have no interest in DorkbotPDX but am a happy user of their services
>
> So, my question is why would I want to make my own boards with all the attendant fuss and mess and then etch and drill them or CNC them? Do you get a better board? A faster turnaround? There is no product to order or store. Is it cheaper to roll your own? I guess I just don't get it. Is it a hobby thing?
>
> I expect this post will cause some consternation and there will be quite a few replies. Then again, I may be quietly ignored.
>
> Vic
>
> Vic Fraenckel
> KC2GUI
> windswaytoo ATSIGN gmail DOT com
>