Hi!
Very nice to see a new member.
Please read in the group archives and in the links provided.
There is TonerTransfer which we are VERY fond of.
It is similar to press-n-peel but without the high costs.
We will be very happy to help you but you have do do a little bit of
homework.
The archives are here:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Homebrew_PCBs/one guide is here:
http://www.fullnet.com/u/tomg/gooteepc.htmthere are others, better, from group members.
i don't know where the links are, i hope in the groups link section.
if not the authors OWE TO PLACE THEM THERE!
(Have you all heared me? you lazy ......) ;-)
Well, most likely nobody has placed them in the link section ;-).
So you will find them with a search in the archives for Toner Transfer
or a google search.
As a contribution to the group it would be nice of you to place all Toner
Transfer
links you find in the folder in the Link section of the group.
When you have done some reading, write again and you will be helped with
any questions.
You must understand, it is not target-oriented to write everything again.
If you invest a hour looking through the stuff you will take up more than i
could
write here.
You are just right here, be assured.
There are some great helpful people here which i owe a lot...
welcome.
Stefan
On Thu, 01 Jan 2004 20:45:09 -0000, joshdewinter <
joshdewinter@...>
wrote:
> Hi everyone.
> I'm so glad to have found a forum like this. I have been experimenting,
> trying to make my own boards for the longest time. I'm always on the
> hunt for new, easy, do-it-at-home methods that provide clean, repeatable
> results. The two I've ever put any faith in are the Press-n-Peel stuff
> for your laser printer, which seems to be damn cost restrictive, and the
> pre-sensitized develop-by-light boards you can develop with a piece of
> overhead transparency and a laser printer, which takes some time and you
> have to order.
> Tell me, are there other methods people are getting good results with
> that might be simpler? I'm new, and I'm guessing there must be better
> ways I haven't heard of.
> I primarily use Mentor or Protel DXP for routing, and mainly have been
> using a proto machine at the company I work for to cut (literally) my
> boards out. But, I'd really like to not have to rely on those high-tech,
> high-$$$ tools, and be able to do something myself at home, using
> EagleCad and some cheap tools and/or chemicals that I can get locally, if
> possible. What's the current homebrew cutting edge stuff?
> Thanks very much for your ideas.
>
> -Josh D
> Pullman, WA
>
>
>