Ben, thanks for your recommendation. The dremel tool will be my next big investment for this project, so I want to make the right choice. You've helped me, and I appreciate it. Kenny, thanks for your feedback. It's good to know someone else uses Eagle. I started Eagle's online tutorial last winter, but never printed a board. So I will probably have to relearn everything. This time, I am getting all the tools & chemicals first, so I can rapidly turn the CAD circuit into a real PCB that I can populate with real components and test. It is imperative that I succeed on the first attempt, by at least some measure. By success, I mean (1) make a circuit that actually works and (2) learn from my mistakes--or rather, learn what needs to be improved--both in the etching and in the silkscreen processes. And this is a complicated enough set of processes for a newbie like me that your advice will help me to succeed the first time. So I'm making a very simple circuit that I already prototyped on a breadboard. As soon as I buy or order the last tool/chemical, then I will sit down and relearn Eagle. (I only have a few things left to get: dremel tool, dremel tool drill press, etching chemicals, and either Tinnit or silver powder to keep the copper from oxidizing.) Okay, so now I understand the "silkscreen" layer is printed in black toner on the laser printer and then transfered onto the etched board the same way you do for the copper anti-etching. Now, I recall from the pictures that the board is light colored once the copper is etched off. So what do you apply to the bare fiberglass board to make the silkscreen layer, once you have applied the toner with the silkscreen pattern? paint? dye? Does Eagle make the silkscreen layer too? So far, I have gotten to December 2003 in reading the topics in this discussion group. So I apologize if these questions have already been answered. Thanks, Alan
Message
Re: PCBs with Eagle 4.16
2005-12-31 by alan00463
Attachments
- No local attachments were found for this message.