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Subject: Re: Electrostatic Toner Transfer

From: "gettingalongwouldbenice" <gettingalongwouldbenice@...>
Date: 2004-11-13

I made a Photo Album for Electrostatic Toner Transfer.
Ain't perfect, but was the best I could do in 15 minutes
of experimentation. I'm dragging my feet on ripping the
fuser out of my laser printer. I don't make enough boards to justify
a disembowled laser printer taking up space.

I'd much rather find something
that could dissolve the clay remnants from the Staples Picture
Paper.
mike

--- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "James Newton"
<jamesmichaelnewton@y...> wrote:
>
> I don't see how your comment has anything to do with Mikes idea.
>
> Yes, the toner and the paper are charged the same. So what? They
> have been loosing their charge since they came out of the printer
> (static dissapates) and now have little or no charge relative to the
> environment around them as well as no charge relative to each other.
>
> The point is that he has charged the blank PCB now. Some or most of
> the Toner will then jump up to the blank. As long as he flips the
> blank over before the charge dissapates, that toner is going to stay
> on the board.
>
> Now, he takes the blank, with the un-fused toner on it, at sets it
> in a hotplate. At this point, the toner melts onto the blank. There
> is no paper to remove, the toner isn't going to come off and we are
> ready to etch.
>
> I think its brilliant. Any other snide remarks you want to make? or
> are you just repeating what you learned from others as documented at:
> http://www.crankorgan.com/whodabitchnow.htm
>
> James.
>
> --- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "crankorgan" <john@k...> wrote:
> >
> > I think you should read this page
> >
> > http://www.physics.uoguelph.ca/summer/scor/articles/scor54.htm
> >
> > Once the toner is on the paper the charge of the paper and the
> toner
> > are the same. While some toner might stick to the board some will
> also
> > stay on the paper. The horse is out of the barn so to speak. The
> > transfer needed to make good circuit boards has to be near perfect.
> >
> >
> >