Make PCBs at Home With Maga
Make PCBs at Home With Maga
Make PCBs at Home With Maga
http://www.riccibitti.com/pcb/pcb.htm
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Required materials
I used
Where to find
Laser printer
Alternately, a photocopier should work
Samsung ML1710 with original toner cartridge. Inkjet printers/copiers don't work.
Attached to your PC
1 of 13
12/28/2011 1:15 PM
Make PCBs at home with magazine paper and your laser printer
http://www.riccibitti.com/pcb/pcb.htm
Ask mummy
Radio Shack
Etching solution
Radio Shack
Kitchen scrubs
Grocery store
Grocery store
Electrical store
You need also: a blade cutter, scotch tape, sandpaper, kitchen paper, cotton wool, vice, hacksaw.
How it works
Laser printers and photocopiers use plastic toner, not ink, to draw images. Toner is the black powder that ends up on your clothes and desk when replacing the printer cartridge. Being plastics, toner is resistant to etching solutions used for making PCBs - if only you could get it on copper! Modifying a printer for working with copper is out of question, but you can work around it with the toner-transfer principle. Like most plastics, toner melts with heat, turning in a sticky, glue-like paste. So why not print on paper as usual, place the sheet face-down on PCB copper, and melt toner on copper applying heat and pressure? Almost right. Right now you got paper toner-glued to PCB copper. Last step is to find a way to remove paper leaving toner on the copper, and youre done. I must credit Thomas Gootee for finding a solution putting glossy, inkjet photo paper in his laser printer. He found that the glossy coating dissolves in water. As most of the toner does not penetrate the glossy surface, you can easily remove the paper support with water: the gloss dissolves and you can remove paper. Clever, isnt it? Unfortunately, the kind of paper used by Thomas is being replaced by new, improved, WATERPROOF (!) photo paper. This is good for your photo prints, but doesn't work anymore for PCBs.
2 of 13
12/28/2011 1:15 PM
Make PCBs at home with magazine paper and your laser printer
http://www.riccibitti.com/pcb/pcb.htm
While searching for more information on the subject, I found a newsgroup thread that suggested replacing expensive inkjet photo paper with glossy paper recycled from magazines. Magazines use ink, not toner, for printing, so previous printing shouldnt affect the process. Another great idea! I tried it and worked so well that I decided to spread the word. Read on for a complete tutorial and my hands-on tips.
Paper preparation
I discard pages heavily printed, preferring pages with normal-size text on white background. Although ink usually does not transfer on the PCB, heavy print of headlines sometimes accumulate so much ink that some gets on copper. Cut the paper to a size suitable for your printer. Try to get straight, clean cuts, as jagged borders and paper dust are more prone to clog printer mechanism. An office cutter is ideal, but also a blade-cutter and a steady hand work well. Be careful to remove all staples, bindings, gadget glue or similar stuff, as they can damage printers drum and mechanisms.
Printer setup
Laser printers are not designed for handling thin, cheap paper, so we must help them feeding the sheets manually instead of using the paper tray. Selecting a straight paper path minimizes the chances of clogging. This is usually achieved setting the printer as if it were printing on envelopes.
3 of 13
12/28/2011 1:15 PM
Make PCBs at home with magazine paper and your laser printer
http://www.riccibitti.com/pcb/pcb.htm
You want to put as much toner on paper as possible, so disable toner economy modes and set printer properties to the maximum contrast and blackness possible. You want to print your PCB to exact size, so disable any form of scaling/resizing (e.g. fit to page). If your printer driver allows, set it to center to page as it helps to get the right position using a non-standard size sheet.
Printing
Disclaimer: your laser printer is not designed to handle this kind of paper. Feeding your printer with paper other than special laser printer paper could damage it and potentially voids the warranty. So you are warned: do it at your own risk.
Print your PCB layout as usual, except you must setup the printer as described above and you must print a mirrored layout.
This is my PC thermometer circuit printed on IEN magazine paper. Notice that it is a mirror image of the circuit (the word PCTHERM is reversed). Placing some text helps recognizing when the layout is mirrored. Text will read straight again once the image is transferred on copper. If you look it very closely, you can see that toner is not opaque enough to 100% cover the words underneath, but this wont affect etching.
4 of 13
12/28/2011 1:15 PM
Make PCBs at home with magazine paper and your laser printer
http://www.riccibitti.com/pcb/pcb.htm
It is essential that the copper surface is spotlessly clean and free from grease that could adverse etching. To remove oxide from copper surface, I use the abrasive spongy scrubs sold for kitchen cleaning. Its cheaper than ultra-fine sandpaper and reusable many times. Metallic wool sold for kitchen cleaning purposes also works. Thoroughly scrub copper surface until really shiny. Rinse and dry with a clean cloth or kitchen paper.
TIP: "...I had a bar of "Solvol" soap in the kitchen cupboard, This stuff is like normal soap but with sand mixed in with it or something. Mechanics and so on often use it as its really good at cleaning the grease and stuff off your hands. It is like soap with built-in sandpaper. Not much effort with some Solvol soap cleaned copper right up..." Robert Davidson
12/28/2011 1:15 PM
Make PCBs at home with magazine paper and your laser printer
http://www.riccibitti.com/pcb/pcb.htm
To make paper alignment easy, cut excess paper around one corner (leave a small margin though). Leave plenty of paper on the other sides to fix the paper to the desk. As the board is larger than the final PCB, there is large margin for easy placement of paper on copper.
Turn the iron to its maximum heat (COTTON position) and turn off steam, if present. While the iron warms up, position the materials on the table. Dont work on an ironing board as its soft surface makes it difficult to apply pressure and keep the PCB in place. Protect table surface with flat, heat-resistant material (e.g. old magazines) and place the board on top, copper face up. Lock the board in place with doubleadhesive tape. Position the PCB printout over the copper surface, toner down, and align paper and board corners. Lock the paper with scotch tape along one side only. This way, you can flip the paper in and out instantly.
Iron it!
6 of 13
12/28/2011 1:15 PM
Make PCBs at home with magazine paper and your laser printer
http://www.riccibitti.com/pcb/pcb.htm
Flip out the paper, and preheat copper surface placing the iron on top of it for 30 seconds. Remove the iron, flip back paper into its previous position over the copper. It is essential that paper does not slip from its position. You can also cover with a second sheet of blank paper to distribute pressure more evenly. Keep moving the iron, while pressing down as evenly as you can, for about one minute. Remove the iron and let the board to cool down.
Peeling
This is the fun part. When the board is cool enough to touch, trim excess paper and immerge in water. Let it soak for 1 minute, or until paper softens.
7 of 13
12/28/2011 1:15 PM
Make PCBs at home with magazine paper and your laser printer
http://www.riccibitti.com/pcb/pcb.htm
Cheap paper softens almost immediately, turning into a pulp that is easy to remove rubbing with your thumb. Keep rubbing until all paper dissolves (usually less than 1 minute). Dont be afraid to scratch toner, if it has transferred correctly it forms a very strong bond with copper.
The board with all paper removed. It is OK if some microscopic paper fibres remain on the toner (but remove any fibre from copper), giving it a silky feeling. It is normal that these fibres turn a little white when dry.
8 of 13
12/28/2011 1:15 PM
Make PCBs at home with magazine paper and your laser printer
http://www.riccibitti.com/pcb/pcb.htm
Magnified view of the tracks, these are 1206 pads and SO8 SMT pads, connected by 20 mils tracks. Some white fibres show up on the black toner surface.
The optimal way to etch is keeping the PCB horizontal and face-down (and possibly stirring). This way dissolved copper gets rapidly dispersed in the solution by gravity. Stirring keeps its concentration even, so the solution close to the PCB does not saturate and etching proceeds quicker. Unfortunately it is not easy to keep the PCB in place in an highly corrosive acid. This hanger is my best attempt to solve the problem. I made it with plastic-insulated copper wire. The wire must have a rigid core, but must be also easy enough to adapt to the board by hand without tools. Core diameter of 1 to 2mm is fine. Give it the form of an arm (the handle) ending with 4 fingers.
9 of 13
12/28/2011 1:15 PM
Make PCBs at home with magazine paper and your laser printer
http://www.riccibitti.com/pcb/pcb.htm
Each finger has a ring tip that fits a corner of the board. Close fingers around board corners: now you can use the handle to splash the board into the etching solution, stir, and inspect how etching proceeds.
Etching
There are many alternatives for etching liquids, and you can use the one that suits your taste. I use ferric chloride (the brown stuff): its cheap, can be reused many times, and doesnt require heating. Actually, moderate heating can speed up etching, but I find it reasonably fast also at room temperature (1015 minutes). The down side of this stuff is that its incredibly messy. It permanently stains everything it gets in contact with: not only clothes or skin (never wear your best clothes when working with it!), but also furniture, floor tiles, tools, everything. It is concentrated enough to corrode any metal including your chrome-plated sink accessories. Even vapours are highly corrosive: dont forget the container open or it will turn any tool or metallic shelf nearby into rust. For etching, I place the container on the floor (some scrap cardboard or newspaper to protect the floor from drops). I fit the board on the hanger, and submerge the PCB. Stir occasionally by waving the hanger.
10 of 13
12/28/2011 1:15 PM
Make PCBs at home with magazine paper and your laser printer
http://www.riccibitti.com/pcb/pcb.htm
First impression may be that nothing happens, but in less than 10 minutes some copper is removed, making first tracks to appear. From now on, stir continuously and check often, as the process completes rather quickly. You dont want to overdo it, otherwise thinner tracks start being eroded sideways. As a rule of thumb, stop 30 seconds after you dont see any copper leftovers over large areas.
Rinse the board with plenty, plenty, plenty of water I store the etching solution in the same plastic box used for etching. When the job is done I just put the hermetic lid on. To further minimize risks of leakage, I put the container inside the bigger one I use for rinsing, put the second lid, and store it in a safe place.
Disclaimer: These are dangerous chemicals. Always read the labels that come with the solution, handle it wearing protective gloves and goggles, keep windows open, dont inhale the fumes.
Finishing touches
11 of 13
12/28/2011 1:15 PM
Make PCBs at home with magazine paper and your laser printer
http://www.riccibitti.com/pcb/pcb.htm
A few drops of thinner (nail polish remover works well) on a pinch of cotton wool will remove completely the toner, bringing back the copper surface. Rinse carefully and dry with a clean cloth or kitchen paper. Trim to final size and refine edges with sandpaper.
12 of 13
12/28/2011 1:15 PM
Make PCBs at home with magazine paper and your laser printer
http://www.riccibitti.com/pcb/pcb.htm
A frequent question is how to make double-sided PCBs. I don't find practical ironing two sides at once, as it is difficult to get consistent temperature. Dal Wheeler uses a document laminator for the purpose, and has put together an excellent tutorial. So, why not give it a try? Im sure you will like it. If you want to try it with the same circuit I used for this tutorial, continue reading about my PC thermometer!
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12/28/2011 1:15 PM