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Subject: Re: Penn Plotter direct etch resist application

From: "grantfair2001" <grant.fair@...>
Date: 2004-04-24

Hi Stefan (and listmembers)-

In an earlier post you said you had tried the Staedtler ink with a
plotter pen, and it had failed to plot to PCB very well. You advised
against trying this.

In spite of your experience, I would like to try this, and I am
curious what you specifically used (so I can avoid your errors, if
there are errors). The one reference on the web I could find said "You
have to use a 757 PLx CS refillable plotter point.It is a
Tungsten-carbide plotter point with a cross grove to allow for more
ink flow. The ink is fairly thick." http://eeshop.unl.edu/pen.txt

I plan to use Staedtler 485 523 sar-9 ink (this I have now). Finding
an inexpensive grooved tungsten-carbide plotter pen is turning out to
be a challenge. The cheapest I can find is about US$64, which is too
expensive for experimenting. Anyway, what plotter pen did you use?

Can anyone suggest an inexpensive source for this kind of pen?

(I don't have a plotter but plan to make my own).

Grant


--- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, Stefan Trethan
<stefan_trethan@g...> wrote:
[snip]
>
> Now i use TT and it is really WYSIWYG.
>
> Not that i wouldn't encourage plotter experiments, i just want to
say it
> seems like a pretty
> good idea but for me it didn't work out at all.
>
> ST