Remember that a lot of waste lines are made of copper alloys (brass and such) and even small amounts of FeCl will etch them away over time. Donald. -- *Plain Text* email -- it's an accessibility issue () no proprietary attachments; no html mail /\ ascii ribbon campaign - <www.asciiribbon.org> ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Jan Kok" <jan.kok.5y@...> > To: "Homebrew PCBs" <Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com> > Sent: Wednesday, January 26, 2011 6:29:47 PM > Subject: Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: Building an etching tank? > > On Wed, Jan 26, 2011 at 1:41 PM, Nathan House > <nathanhooyagroups@...> wrote: > >>Just tried the brushing-with-sponge technique, with excellent results. > > > > Well, maybe I should give ferric chloride a try then. It would avoid the > > rust problem which I only recently learned about, is probably safer to use > > (there aren't any fumes with ferric chloride, correct?). Do you just wash > > off the sponge in the sink afterwords? > > I did the etching while holding the board above or in a plastic > dishwashing basin. I had a 1-liter glass beaker filled with water > which I used to rinse off the board a couple times to get a better > look at the etching progress, and then in the end to rinse out the > sponge and gloves. Then carefully poured the contaminated water down > the drain, rinsed out the dishwashing basin and poured that water > carefully down the drain, then not-so-carefully rinsed everything > again in the laundry sink. I could probably do that hundreds of times > without staining anything. It was less mess than I expected, really > not much mess at all. > > I noticed some fumes from the FeCl3 when I heated it in an open > beaker, but didn't notice any fumes at all when using it cold. (Not > that I put my nose close to the opening of the bottle... :-) > > Cheers, > - Jan
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Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: Building an etching tank?
2011-01-27 by Donald H Locker
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