Archive of the former Yahoo!Groups mailing list: Homebrew PCBs
Subject: RE : [Homebrew_PCBs] Plated through holes
From: Robert Hedan <robert.hedan@...>
Date: 2005-05-25
If you want to get into nitty-gritty details and not want to flood the board
with your minute-to-minute observations, :D please feel free to email me
directly. I'm really interested in this process and want to know everything
you learn about it.
I wonder if other 'silver' pens get the same results. I'm sure I bought a
metallic silver marker from Staples. I'm going to dig it out and see if
that thing works.
Robert
:)
For some time I have given thought to a method of plating through holes
with out going to the expensive process that a comercial house uses. I
recently tried an experiment using a conductive ink pen from Radio
Shack, I drilled the hole, then injected the conductive ink into the
hole until it was well coated, then made sure there was a donut of the
conductive ink around the copper on both sides. I then baked the board
and checked for resistance. The hole had been sucessfully "plated",
resistance was as close to 0 ohms as I could measure with the equipment
I have available.
The Radio Shack Pen conductive ink pen is essentually silver particles
suspended in a carrier that evaporates leaving the silver.
Radio Shack states that you can solder on to this conductive ink after
baking, so my next experiment will be to plate a hole, and see if it
will fill with solder.
I am curious to see if this will hold up to repeated thermal cycles as
the "real" plated through holes do.