Well, I finally motivated myself this holiday weekend to get my PCB EDM lash-up to cut copper, and, YES, it does cut clean lines thru the copper without board burning or marking. Shine a torch through the tracks from the rear of the board and there is a faithful line of light, (no firstborn goats or pentagrams neccessary). With my highest power lens and head magnifier I could see no trace of copper whiskers on the EDM'd track. Interestingly, the copper is blasted away entirely below the cross section of the wire, there is no 'erosion bleeding' into the surrounding copper outside of the wire dia. Have only cut straight lines so far with 26 swg and with a 0.2 mm step increment, (need to modify the stepper gear ratio), and with multiple (continuous) sparking between increments, (no on/off sparks or raster yet). One significant problem has emerged which Curt Richards did not address, (or if he did, he did not mention it). The wire electrode erosion is significant, and will require an active Z axis correction to maintain as consistent a spark gap distance as possible between the electrode and pcb surface. To do this I will insert a routine to 'touch down' the electrode on the copper to zero the gap,(no spark, closure sensed by two PIC output/inputs for voltage present), and then retreat the electrode to a standard clearance before any track eroding is commenced, (Andrew, this is why I need the BMP byte by byte transfer). This will also tend to compensate for any board distortion. Used tapwater as a dielectric with no problems, (the modified Garden of EDM circuit controls the electrolysis with no problems). Curt controlled his spark discharge voltage by dynamically adjusting the electrode gap on the fly. I think that for pcb work this is not the correct approach because of the wire erosion problem, since one needs to KNOW the gap distance AND available discharge energy BEFORE discharge, which is why I am going for the touch down zeroing method, (slower but speed is not significant at the moment). The discharge energy will be set by presetting the voltage level required and capacitor selection, (simple comparator control integrated into the spark control). I think this is the secret of successful pcb edm'ing. This is really looking as if direct raw copper board to finished pcb is going to be possible. Roger ___________________________________________________________ Yahoo! Photos \ufffd NEW, now offering a quality print service from just 7p a photo http://uk.photos.yahoo.com
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PCB EDM MILL Initial Tests
2006-05-02 by roger lucas
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