Here's a variation on your idea that may work well. Some inkjet printers (e.g. the Epson R320) will print on CDs. They already have the straight-path and clearance built-in. By using a CD shaped circuit board, or a board that approximates the CD carrier, the printer may be fooled into printing "Resist" directly onto the board! On Thu, Apr 14, 2011 at 11:08 AM, DmitriA <rcdd@...> wrote: > > > Sorry for shotting down an otherwise great idea, but having played with > these laser diodes quite a bit, specifically in terms of cutting with > the beam <http://elabz.com/category/laser-cutting/> , I would have to > say that there is just not enough energy in the beam of a regular, > off-the-shelf DVD or even Bluray burner to evaporate paint off a > copper-clad FR (or any other solid material for that matter). Copper > transfers heat away from the laser ablation point too well, in fact just > about any non-porous material does. That's why most of the stuff you'll > see cut with these laser diodes is foam. > > Additionally, as others pointed out, the optics of the drive are > designed to be focused at a point in a middle of the CD's thickness and > even though the lens do adjust floating on the electromagnetic mount, > the adjustment would most likely be not enough to focus on the surface > (plus the pain layer thickness) instead. > > But I do like the idea in principal and I am planning on upping the > energy quite a bit by installing a 1W laser diode (IR or blue) and > trying paint evaporation again. It may just work on a thinnest (0.7 > mil's the thinnest?) PCB I can find... > > > --- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "Boman33" <boman33@...> wrote: > > > > Here is a crazy idea that might just work: > > > > A first requirement is being able to cut out a PCB the to look just > like a > > CD. It needs to be accurate and typically a lathe would be used. > Apply a > > layer of paint or other protective coating over the copper. > > > > > > > > Pop it into a CD burner that has the Light Scribe or whatever it is > called > > feature to mark CDs. Take the layout and convert it to a JPG and use > the > > marking software to place it on the CD. Several small SMT PCBs will > fit on > > a CD. "Write" the picture to the "CD" and hopefully it will vaporize > the > > paint. Afterwards etch the boards as usual. > > > > If the power is controllable, it might also be used to expose a > photoresist > > as an alternative. > > > > Bertho > > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Message
Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Re: CD shaped PCB
2011-04-14 by Kip Shaffer
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