Alt-BEAM Archive

Message #08361



To: beam@sgiblab.sgi.com
From: Thomas Pilgaard Nielsen ascii@hum.auc.dk
Date: Sat, 18 Dec 1999 11:28:13 +0100
Subject: [alt-beam] Re: PCB iron on transfers


Dennison Bertram wrote:

Not to say that you don't know what it's all about, but my local electron=
ics
retailer instructed me that it would seem quite difficult once you got th=
e hang
of it. I've seen boards done with iron on tranfers and I must say that I =
was
impressed. I am certainly going to have a go at it some time.

cheers - Thomas

> Stay away from Iron on Transfers. I don't care what people say, they ju=
st
> don't work. They seriously will be a huge dissapointment. Your better o=
ff to
> simply put some time and energy into a good design, and spend the extra
> bucks to have it fashioned at a real PCB etching facility. Seriously, I=
know
> you're going to have to do it the hard way a few times before you learn=
, but
> it pays off.
>
> dennison
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-beam@sgiblab.sgi.com [mailto:owner-beam@sgiblab.sgi.com]On
> Behalf Of jester96@iname.com
> Sent: Friday, December 17, 1999 7:53 PM
> To: beam@sgiblab.sgi.com
> Subject: PCB iron on transfers
>
> I know you can get PCB Iron on transfers for laser printers, but what a=
bout
> inkjets???
>
> I work at a computer store, and we have T-Shirt transfers for inkjets. =
Would
> they work do you think or would the solution etch right through it? Has
> anyone tried it before?
>
> The only way I can make PCBs now is with a pen, and that it's a pain in=
the
> arse, so I am looking for something better. How much do cheap UV boxes =
cost?
>
> Thanks
> Chris
>
> ---------------------------------------------------
> Get free personalized email at http://www.iname.com

--
---
"Stj=E5lne tusser skriver bedst."
Yvonne Miller



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