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Re: Transparency film for laser printer

 

?
Please DO let us know how that works out for you....
?
Charlie, N0TT
CU on Topband contests
?
On Tue, 13 Apr 2021 17:18:58 -0700 "Nick Kennedy" <kennnick@...> writes:

Thanks everyone.? I've decided to go with the inkjet printer and not risk issues with too-hot laser printing.

73-

Nick, WA5BDU
?


Re: Transparency film for laser printer

 

开云体育

To check for actual printer resolution and optimize it, ?I made resolution test charts.

Also included is the standard USAF -1951 resolution chart.

Bertho

?

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Nick Kennedy
Sent: Tuesday, April 13, 2021 20:19
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [homebrewpcbs] Transparency film for laser printer

?

Thanks everyone.? I've decided to go with the inkjet printer and not risk issues with too-hot laser printing.

73-

Nick, WA5BDU


Re: Transparency film for laser printer

 

Once you degine the feed as transperency,the printer accordingly takes care of.


On Wed, 14 Apr 2021, 17:20 Nick Kennedy, <kennnick@...> wrote:
Thanks everyone.? I've decided to go with the inkjet printer and not risk issues with too-hot laser printing.

73-

Nick, WA5BDU


Re: Transparency film for laser printer

 

Thanks everyone.? I've decided to go with the inkjet printer and not risk issues with too-hot laser printing.

73-

Nick, WA5BDU


Re: Transparency film for laser printer

 

Nick, you've undoubtedly already considered using "Kinko's" to achieve the results you are looking for... ??

Not familiar with inkjet transparencies.? I've used high temperature LaserJet transparencies, but they all seem to shrink a little bit...? Have considered disabling the fuser to just get the powdered image on the substrate for easier transfer.? Then I laid down until the feeling went away...

on another unsolicited side-bar, I have a Brother printer and to achieve adequate toner density have to run an image through twice.? Several trials always necessary and don't expect to have good 20 mil registration.? Can be made to work but usually with considerable effort.

Final thought, in turns, ask each of your neighbors to print something out for you on a transparency...? Then work on making the winner your "Printer-buddy"...

Cheers...! (no not drinking, always like this...)
--
Greg
KC9ZEW


Re: Réf. : Re: [homebrewpcbs] Transparency film for laser printer

 

Jetstar makes both types of transparency, IIRC.

Leon?

On 11 Apr 2021 17:33, F1CHF <F1CHF@...> wrote:
When I was working (20 years ago !) I was in the LEXMARK compagny
about difference with transparent for laser and inkjet printers
there is a BIG difference
laser has a HOT ROLL heater around 180° to fix the toner on the paper
inkjet paper ?has "micro small" holes to capture ink but there is NO heater ?roll?
so if you use laser transparency on a inkjet printer, ink will not be fixed?
and if you use inkjet transparency paper on a laser printer, the risk if you
have the paper that stuck around the heater roll, printer can be damaged
so take care
hope my poor english is enough clear !
francois F1CHF
?
?
?
?
-------Message original-------
?
Date : 11/04/2021 18:08:23
Sujet : Re: [homebrewpcbs] Transparency film for laser printer
?
In the past I have only used Canon or Brother Inkjet Printers.

Even with special transparencies for laser printers, I have never got good results while there was no problem with Inkjet Printers.

73 de Jean-Claude, HB3YDH


Am 11.04.2021 um 17:48 schrieb Leon via groups.io:
I used to get excellent results with an HP inkjet printer. I don't bother now and get my PCBs made in China.

Leon

On 10 Apr 2021 21:43, Nick Kennedy <kennnick@...> wrote:
I'm trying to get rolling on the photoresist method. I have a Samsung B&W laser printer which I have used for the toner transfer method and hoped to use to print my transparencies for the UV/photoresist method.

Looking at transparency film for laser printers, I'm seeing advice to operate the printer at lower temperature and/or set it up for printing transparencies.? My printer does not have these options.??

Does that mean I'll likely have trouble with my prints to transparencies?? Would I be better off trying to use an inkjet printer and the appropriate transparencies for that type of printer?

Thanks,

Nick, WA5BDU





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?


Réf. : Re: [homebrewpcbs] Transparency film for laser printer

 

开云体育

When I was working (20 years ago !) I was in the LEXMARK compagny
about difference with transparent for laser and inkjet printers
there is a BIG difference
laser has a HOT ROLL heater around 180° to fix the toner on the paper
inkjet paper ?has "micro small" holes to capture ink but there is NO heater ?roll?
so if you use laser transparency on a inkjet printer, ink will not be fixed?
and if you use inkjet transparency paper on a laser printer, the risk if you
have the paper that stuck around the heater roll, printer can be damaged
so take care
hope my poor english is enough clear !
francois F1CHF
?
?
?
?
-------Message original-------
?
Date : 11/04/2021 18:08:23
Sujet : Re: [homebrewpcbs] Transparency film for laser printer
?
In the past I have only used Canon or Brother Inkjet Printers.

Even with special transparencies for laser printers, I have never got good results while there was no problem with Inkjet Printers.

73 de Jean-Claude, HB3YDH


Am 11.04.2021 um 17:48 schrieb Leon via groups.io:
I used to get excellent results with an HP inkjet printer. I don't bother now and get my PCBs made in China.

Leon

On 10 Apr 2021 21:43, Nick Kennedy <kennnick@...> wrote:
I'm trying to get rolling on the photoresist method. I have a Samsung B&W laser printer which I have used for the toner transfer method and hoped to use to print my transparencies for the UV/photoresist method.

Looking at transparency film for laser printers, I'm seeing advice to operate the printer at lower temperature and/or set it up for printing transparencies.? My printer does not have these options.??

Does that mean I'll likely have trouble with my prints to transparencies?? Would I be better off trying to use an inkjet printer and the appropriate transparencies for that type of printer?

Thanks,

Nick, WA5BDU





Diese E-Mail wurde von Avast Antivirus-Software auf Viren geprüft.


?


Re: Transparency film for laser printer

 

?
FWIW....
I've tried the laser transparencies.? The printer didn't lay down enough toner at
it's heaviest setting, so I made two of them and carefully overlaid.? That worked.
?
73,
Charlie, N0TT
?
On Sat, 10 Apr 2021 13:43:20 -0700 "Nick Kennedy" <kennnick@...> writes:

I'm trying to get rolling on the photoresist method. I have a Samsung B&W laser printer which I have used for the toner transfer method and hoped to use to print my transparencies for the UV/photoresist method.

Looking at transparency film for laser printers, I'm seeing advice to operate the printer at lower temperature and/or set it up for printing transparencies.? My printer does not have these options.??

Does that mean I'll likely have trouble with my prints to transparencies?? Would I be better off trying to use an inkjet printer and the appropriate transparencies for that type of printer?

Thanks,

Nick, WA5BDU
?


Re: Transparency film for laser printer

 

开云体育

In the past I have only used Canon or Brother Inkjet Printers.

Even with special transparencies for laser printers, I have never got good results while there was no problem with Inkjet Printers.

73 de Jean-Claude, HB3YDH


Am 11.04.2021 um 17:48 schrieb Leon via groups.io:
I used to get excellent results with an HP inkjet printer. I don't bother now and get my PCBs made in China.

Leon

On 10 Apr 2021 21:43, Nick Kennedy <kennnick@...> wrote:
I'm trying to get rolling on the photoresist method. I have a Samsung B&W laser printer which I have used for the toner transfer method and hoped to use to print my transparencies for the UV/photoresist method.

Looking at transparency film for laser printers, I'm seeing advice to operate the printer at lower temperature and/or set it up for printing transparencies.? My printer does not have these options.??

Does that mean I'll likely have trouble with my prints to transparencies?? Would I be better off trying to use an inkjet printer and the appropriate transparencies for that type of printer?

Thanks,

Nick, WA5BDU





Diese E-Mail wurde von Avast Antivirus-Software auf Viren geprüft.



Re: Transparency film for laser printer

 

I used to get excellent results with an HP inkjet printer. I don't bother now and get my PCBs made in China.

Leon

On 10 Apr 2021 21:43, Nick Kennedy <kennnick@...> wrote:
I'm trying to get rolling on the photoresist method. I have a Samsung B&W laser printer which I have used for the toner transfer method and hoped to use to print my transparencies for the UV/photoresist method.

Looking at transparency film for laser printers, I'm seeing advice to operate the printer at lower temperature and/or set it up for printing transparencies.? My printer does not have these options.??

Does that mean I'll likely have trouble with my prints to transparencies?? Would I be better off trying to use an inkjet printer and the appropriate transparencies for that type of printer?

Thanks,

Nick, WA5BDU


Re: Transparency film for laser printer

 

开云体育

Hi Nick,

I have had much better luck with an inkjet printer and waterproof film used for screen printing than I ever had with a laser printer and transparencies. Very opaque, no pinholes, no need to double up. I find that the inkjet also has better dimensional accuracy. My laster tended to slightly change the scale of the image out to the edges. I do tell the printer to lay down maximum ink at maximum DPI. Other than that, nothing special.

Here are the films that I use, but I’m sure there are others that will work the same:


I don’t use any fancy ink. Just a cheap refill kit for HP cartridges.

Good luck,
Brett

On Apr 10, 2021, at 3:43 PM, Nick Kennedy <kennnick@...> wrote:

I'm trying to get rolling on the photoresist method. I have a Samsung B&W laser printer which I have used for the toner transfer method and hoped to use to print my transparencies for the UV/photoresist method.

Looking at transparency film for laser printers, I'm seeing advice to operate the printer at lower temperature and/or set it up for printing transparencies.? My printer does not have these options.??

Does that mean I'll likely have trouble with my prints to transparencies?? Would I be better off trying to use an inkjet printer and the appropriate transparencies for that type of printer?

Thanks,

Nick, WA5BDU


Transparency film for laser printer

 

I'm trying to get rolling on the photoresist method. I have a Samsung B&W laser printer which I have used for the toner transfer method and hoped to use to print my transparencies for the UV/photoresist method.

Looking at transparency film for laser printers, I'm seeing advice to operate the printer at lower temperature and/or set it up for printing transparencies.? My printer does not have these options.??

Does that mean I'll likely have trouble with my prints to transparencies?? Would I be better off trying to use an inkjet printer and the appropriate transparencies for that type of printer?

Thanks,

Nick, WA5BDU


Re: Photo Resist Preparation - thanks for the suggestions

 

How about "positive photoresist" from


Donald.
--
*Plain Text* email -- it's an accessibility issue
() no proprietary attachments; no html mail
/\ <>

On 2021-03-15 4:14 a.m., Jim Pruitt wrote:
What is the nomenclature for the positive resist and where can it be
purchased?

Thank you.

Jim Pruitt


On 3/14/2021 6:07 PM, Sam Reaves wrote:
Negative resist. You use it with a negative. A bottle will?last a
lifetime.
I think it is made by Transene now.


Sam Reaves
ARS W3OHM
Owner and Moderator of:
LeCroy Owners Group on 开云体育
Electronics and Mechanical Hardware Design Engineering Manager
Andritz Rolls Global Research Center (RETIRED)



On Fri, Mar 12, 2021 at 11:56 PM Jim Pruitt <jpruitt67@...
<mailto:jpruitt67@...>> wrote:

Is kpr a negative resist?? Or positive resist?

On Fri, Mar 12, 2021, 8:49 PM Sam Reaves <sam.reaves@...
<mailto:sam.reaves@...>> wrote:

A friend of mine uses cosmetic cotton pads(get them at your
local dollar store)? to apply Kodak Photoresist (KPR). When it
is dry he places the unexposed boards in an old phone book for
storage and pulls one out (all under a yellow safe light) when
he needs one. He has used this method for decades.

Sam
W3OHM


_._,_._,_


Re: Photo Resist Preparation - thanks for the suggestions

 

开云体育

What is the nomenclature for the positive resist and where can it be purchased?

Thank you.

Jim Pruitt


On 3/14/2021 6:07 PM, Sam Reaves wrote:

Negative resist. You use it with a negative. A bottle will?last a lifetime.
I think it is made by Transene now.


Sam Reaves
ARS W3OHM
Owner and Moderator of:
LeCroy Owners Group on 开云体育
Electronics and Mechanical Hardware Design Engineering Manager
Andritz Rolls Global Research Center (RETIRED)



On Fri, Mar 12, 2021 at 11:56 PM Jim Pruitt <jpruitt67@...> wrote:
Is kpr a negative resist?? Or positive resist?

On Fri, Mar 12, 2021, 8:49 PM Sam Reaves <sam.reaves@...> wrote:
A friend of mine uses cosmetic cotton pads(get them at your local dollar store)? to apply Kodak Photoresist (KPR). When it is dry he places the unexposed boards in an old phone book for storage and pulls one out (all under a yellow safe light) when he needs one. He has used this method for decades.

Sam
W3OHM


Re: Photo Resist Preparation - thanks for the suggestions

 

开云体育

Where is PKP-308i purchased?

?

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Sam Reaves
Sent: Sunday, March 14, 2021 9:08 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [homebrewpcbs] Photo Resist Preparation - thanks for the suggestions

?

Negative resist. You use it with a negative. A bottle will?last a lifetime.

I think it is made by Transene now.

?

Sam Reaves

ARS W3OHM

Owner and Moderator of:

LeCroy Owners Group on 开云体育

Electronics and Mechanical Hardware Design Engineering Manager

Andritz Rolls Global Research Center (RETIRED)

?

?

?

On Fri, Mar 12, 2021 at 11:56 PM Jim Pruitt <jpruitt67@...> wrote:

Is kpr a negative resist?? Or positive resist?

?

On Fri, Mar 12, 2021, 8:49 PM Sam Reaves <sam.reaves@...> wrote:

A friend of mine uses cosmetic cotton pads(get them at your local dollar store)? to apply Kodak Photoresist (KPR). When it is dry he places the unexposed boards in an old phone book for storage and pulls one out (all under a yellow safe light) when he needs one. He has used this method for decades.

Sam
W3OHM


Re: Photo Resist Preparation - thanks for the suggestions

 

开云体育

Short wave sensitive.? Unshielded mercury vapor arcs.? Expose through negatives where the trace is transparent, background is opaque.? Develop in the appropriate developer and then put the dye on.? That'll show you where the resist really is.? Cover holes (if any) with something opaque, then etch.? It'll withstand ferric chloride, although I'd recommend CuCl etchant (hydrochloric acid and hydrogen peroxide to start with) because it's FAR cheaper, better behaved, and works as well.

Once etched, strip off resist or solder through depending on whether or not you want tin-lead plating.? I never had access to tin lead plating when I was using KPR.

All of my boards then were using crepe paper tape, 2x photo masters, an 8x10 view camera shooting on kodalith, (use kodalith developer!? Dektol gives? you gray scale), and then contact printing.

Harvey


On 3/14/2021 9:07 PM, Sam Reaves wrote:

Negative resist. You use it with a negative. A bottle will?last a lifetime.
I think it is made by Transene now.


Sam Reaves
ARS W3OHM
Owner and Moderator of:
LeCroy Owners Group on 开云体育
Electronics and Mechanical Hardware Design Engineering Manager
Andritz Rolls Global Research Center (RETIRED)



On Fri, Mar 12, 2021 at 11:56 PM Jim Pruitt <jpruitt67@...> wrote:
Is kpr a negative resist?? Or positive resist?

On Fri, Mar 12, 2021, 8:49 PM Sam Reaves <sam.reaves@...> wrote:
A friend of mine uses cosmetic cotton pads(get them at your local dollar store)? to apply Kodak Photoresist (KPR). When it is dry he places the unexposed boards in an old phone book for storage and pulls one out (all under a yellow safe light) when he needs one. He has used this method for decades.

Sam
W3OHM


Re: Photo Resist Preparation - thanks for the suggestions

 

Negative resist. You use it with a negative. A bottle will?last a lifetime.
I think it is made by Transene now.


Sam Reaves
ARS W3OHM
Owner and Moderator of:
LeCroy Owners Group on 开云体育
Electronics and Mechanical Hardware Design Engineering Manager
Andritz Rolls Global Research Center (RETIRED)



On Fri, Mar 12, 2021 at 11:56 PM Jim Pruitt <jpruitt67@...> wrote:
Is kpr a negative resist?? Or positive resist?

On Fri, Mar 12, 2021, 8:49 PM Sam Reaves <sam.reaves@...> wrote:
A friend of mine uses cosmetic cotton pads(get them at your local dollar store)? to apply Kodak Photoresist (KPR). When it is dry he places the unexposed boards in an old phone book for storage and pulls one out (all under a yellow safe light) when he needs one. He has used this method for decades.

Sam
W3OHM


Re: Photo Resist Preparation - thanks for the suggestions

 

Is kpr a negative resist?? Or positive resist?


On Fri, Mar 12, 2021, 8:49 PM Sam Reaves <sam.reaves@...> wrote:
A friend of mine uses cosmetic cotton pads(get them at your local dollar store)? to apply Kodak Photoresist (KPR). When it is dry he places the unexposed boards in an old phone book for storage and pulls one out (all under a yellow safe light) when he needs one. He has used this method for decades.

Sam
W3OHM


Re: Photo Resist Preparation - thanks for the suggestions

 

A friend of mine uses cosmetic cotton pads(get them at your local dollar store)? to apply Kodak Photoresist (KPR). When it is dry he places the unexposed boards in an old phone book for storage and pulls one out (all under a yellow safe light) when he needs one. He has used this method for decades.

Sam
W3OHM


Re: USB scope pcb's. compare PCBCAD51 with Kicad

 

I am a little late to the party but have a look at this as it is the easiest PCB software I have ever used. Not free but very inexpensive:



I've made hundreds of layouts both hobby and professional with it. In a few hours with it you can make PCB layouts and components.

There is a free demo that does everything but save. Making 274-X gerbers and drill files are a breeze. You can also do toner transfer and CNC milled boards.

If it looks like something you would use join my SprintLayout group on groups.io. Definitely worth your time.

Sam
W3OHM