DJ, I just realized via your last name and the Spiral Challenge URL, that you are the owner/keeper of the Challenge. And, we may have chatted/email before on other issues. Thanks for the Challenge, and insight. Yes, the resistance between traces is greater the several Meg ohms. I updated the blog page a little. I think with more attention to details, I could successfully produce a flawless 10/10 Challenge board, using the Toner Transfer Method. Or maybe even a higher resolution version with smaller traces. Perhaps a PCB Software Vendor, Transfer Paper Vendor, or an Industry Leader would like to sponsor a Homebrew PCB Contest or a Formal Challenge. It would be fun. Thanks for your Homebrew PCB support and efforts. Regards, Eldon Brown 72 - Eldon - WA0UWH - CN88xc - http://WA0UWH.blogspot.com/ On Thu, Aug 4, 2011 at 10:08 AM, DJ Delorie <dj@...> wrote: > ** > > > > Sweet! > > Here's a tip: you know the track-to-track spacing is 20 mil (you did say > 10/10 pattern, yes?). Given that, you can calculate the actual DPI of > the photo (about 4300 dpi for the spot I was measuring). Also measure a > track, and you can compute the actual track width (about 9.2 mil in some > spots, 7.1 in others). > > But simply measuring pixels-of-copper vs pixels-of-space should > tell you how close to "perfect" you are. > > Your ohms are a little high, some things that might cause that: > > * pinholes cause "necks" in the copper which add resistance > > * cleaning/scraping/sanding the copper might thin it somewhat > > * thinner traces on average would increase it > > If you just go by the ohms ratio, it says your average trace width is > 18/23 * 10 = 7.8 mil, which sounds close enough. > > Did you measure the high ohms between the two tracks? > > Also, if you have a flatbed scanner, they're often useful for > high-accuracy PCB scans. > ,___ > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Spiral Challenge
2011-08-04 by Eldon Brown
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