I knew about the heat so when I build my bubble tank it will have
a heater. :-)
On 3/5/2019 5:28 AM, MVS Sarma wrote:
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i do warm the etchant to 80deg Celsius in a boil
water under tank. It makes my work faster.
On Tue, Mar 5, 2019 at 4:56 PM
MVS Sarma via Groups.Io <mvssarma=
[email protected]>
wrote:
Ferric chloride disposal is a a cumber some affair.
?Most Indian PCB makers appear to be using HCL and
h2o2.
Ammonium per oxide, i bought a bottle, but never used.
Till now only Ferric chloride . Working OK? for me for
my hobby use.
On Tue, Mar 5, 2019 at
3:19 PM Fast Eddie <
epinnell@...>
wrote:
It's been awhile, but
what I learned from using the acid-H2O2 mix is that time
is of the essence...the longer the board sits in the
etchant, the more the etchant starts eating away at the
unprotected sides of the copper traces that you are trying
to preserve, so if you have very narrow traces closely
spaced they can end up being thinner than desired.
Eventually I changed my technique from using the acid-H2O2
bath to using about a teaspoon or two of ferric chloride
and a small piece of a car wash sponge and scrubbing the
board to etch it. I found that I could etch a board in
less time with less circuit trace erosion as well as focus
the etching on those slower to etch areas. I used very
little ferric chloride in the process so i had next to
nothing to dispose of as well. Of course, there are pluses
and minuses in every method you use, but this one worked
the best for me. I used to get the FeCl3 from Radio Shack
it was that long ago. If you aren't happy with your
results you might think about giving that method a
try...like I say, it worked well for me.
_._,_._,_