The copper wire in my Coleman cooler half full of etchant is getting smaller and smaller in diameter, and lots of it has disapeared into solution, but it seems it has been going slowly. So when I saw a used vacuum pump/air source for sale (cheap) today, what could I do? This has a higher volume output - over 2 CFM at 2 or 3 psig. It really has the etchant "boiling" away. I hope the extra air will spead up oxygenating the etchant and getting the copper dissolved, and the etchant turned green/blue and ready to etch, much faster. (The newer pump is a newer design with a magnetically driven piston; apparently the piston is the only moving part. I will keep the old carbon vane Gast vacuum pump for backup; I was not sure how to maintain it, or how long it would last.) The splashes of dark brown etchant on the walls of the cooler slowly turn this beautiful green blue color as they soak up oxygen from the air - kind of looks pretty. The agitation from this much bubbling air is very substantial. I don't think that an etchant pump would add anything over this level of agitation - have to wait and see what kind of etch times I get. The air sparger design from Think and Tinker is designed more for agitation, I think, than fine bubbling, which apparently would oxygenate faster than the big bubble type. I hope to be etching boards soon. Grant
Message
CuCl is progressing
2003-04-27 by grantfair2001
Attachments
- No local attachments were found for this message.