Hi Geoff, (You asked if anyone had used Glossy Photo paper for toner transfer.) I tried the glossy photo paper after a member of this list strongly recommened Staples brand, part number 19899. It was the worst stuff I've ever used. I tried it several times using different pressure, heats, etc and it was a "non-performer" compaired to the much thinner inkjet paper I had been using. I used my LaserJet-5000 to image both papers. Best, Charlie On Tue, 19 Nov 2013 12:05:24 +1300 "Geoff Wood" <geoff@...> writes: Hi folks, New here. I'm Geoff from New Zealand. Have been doing PCBs on and off for maybe 35 years, first by resist-pen, then Bishop Graphics and Riston. After a lull of many years have now tried Press'n'Peel (blue) with a distinct lack of success. Printing on Konica-Minolta C353 laser onto dull side of film. Good solid toner coating. Ironing onto nice shiny clean board at various temperatures, for up to 4 minutes. Film comes of leaving incomplete tracks on PCB, some toner and/or some thin remnants of the blue film coating remaining on film. Don't know if a factor, but film was purchased over 3 years ago, so may be quite old. Here are some pix of my results ( some of film after pressing, and some of pcb after press. Last pic is 3 patches done at the iondicated temperatures. https://www.dropbox.com/sh/dzuddajqn3nibwb/nN5rgfe3lt Grateful any suggestions. Also, I see on YouTube others have tried a similar process using glossy photo paper, and soaking off - anybody here had with success with that method ? cheers geoff [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Message
Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Press'n'Peel problems, and "Hi"
2013-11-18 by <n0tt1@...>
Attachments
- No local attachments were found for this message.