Archive of the former Yahoo!Groups mailing list: Homebrew PCBs
Subject: Toner curing
From: "Randy S." <rj3819@...>
Date: 2011-03-05
OK .. before I start this ..
Its something new I was playing with this A.M.
and wanted others views ..
I cant search the archives from work ..
So if it has come up before .. apologies.
I did a toner transfer of a small GDO circuit
this morning and was using a scalpel to clean
up some of the traces that were too close together
or with paper in between.
Seemed like the toner was coming off to easily ..
And had an issue earlier that morning trying the
direct etch method of rubbing the etchant onto
the another board with toner coming off.
Yes .. I realize . heat and pressure may not have been correct.
That aside .. I thought .. well I have use my oven to bake
on dry transfers before .. in fact .. it worked so well
that I had a hell of a time scrubbing them off after etching.
But it was the best darn board I had ever made with dry
transfers.
I also saw a recent article on direct etchant transfer via
inkjet printer. In that article, it mentions curing the toner
after . Along with another article where a fellow feeds
his pcbs directly thru a laserjet I want to say, and said it works
well if he cures the toner as well ..
So .. I thought .. I have nothing to lose by trying ..
So I cranked up the over to 260 ish degrees ..
Put the board in for about 30 minutes ..
( all the time I had before leaving for work today )
Quenched the board in cold water and dried.
Took it into my shop and pecked at it with the scalpel
again. All I can say is wow .. that seemed to have made a difference.
Was a lot more difficult to scrap away any toner ..
I Did this all kind of quickly and will try some more test boards this weekend
to be
sure of the results ..
Anyone tried this before ? or has it been brought up before?
I guess .. for those that have questionable results on the toner bonding to the
board fairly often, that perhaps this would help them out ..
From what I can see so far, seems to work, and what can it hurt.
Other then wasting some energy heating the oven ..
Could be my imagination, but it also seemed to " cleanup or sharpen"
the existing traces. Maybe a cohesion thing going on there?
Thoughts ? Ideas ? no flaming me pse LOL
Randy - N2CUA