Many of the old PCBs were made with phenolic PCB material. The
color varies between brown to various shades of beige.
You can still purchase bare (blank) copper-clad phenolic PCB material.
Another characteristic of old PCBs is that the layout is often done by hand, using crepe dots and crepe tape in various widths. Even earlier layouts were strictly hand-drawn - no tape or dots.
dwayne
At 01:08 PM 11/12/2016, 'Brad' unclefalter@... [Homebrew_PCBs] wrote:
You can still purchase bare (blank) copper-clad phenolic PCB material.
Another characteristic of old PCBs is that the layout is often done by hand, using crepe dots and crepe tape in various widths. Even earlier layouts were strictly hand-drawn - no tape or dots.
dwayne
At 01:08 PM 11/12/2016, 'Brad' unclefalter@... [Homebrew_PCBs] wrote:
Hey guys,
I have recently heard of some methods of �dyeing� PCBs to achieve coloration closer to what vintage PCB stock looked like. I�m wondering if any of you have experience on this, what works, etc.
I recently acquired some original, untouched Mark-8 computer boards: http://bradhodge.ca/blog/?p=826
I�m hoping to use them to help create replicas. But I just can�t get the PCB to look the way I want. They look too modern. I�ve heard dyeing can help, and that one can even fake the fab house marks somehow.
I�m surprised there isn�t a stock of vintage copper clad out there somewhere. Seems to be vintage everything else these days in electronics..
Brad
--Dwayne Reid <dwayner@...>Trinity Electronics Systems Ltd Edmonton, AB, CANADA780-489-3199 voice 780-487-6397 fax 888-489-3199 Toll FreeCustom Electronics Design and Manufacturing