I'm with Stefan. After etching, I clean off the toner in running water, using gentle pressure from a stainless steel pot-scrubber pad, the same one I use for cleaning the copper beforehand. It's fast, works fine, and, despite what you might fear, it doesn't damage the 8-10 mil traces I usually use. No chemicals, no mess. James Arthur --- In Homebrew_PCBs@yahoogroups.com, "Stefan Trethan" <stefan_trethan@...> wrote: > > Don't use acetone to remove the toner, instead use a steel scraper or > even the edge of another PCB to scrape the toner off mechanically. > Then use acetone to remove any tiny bits that may be left and to clean > the board. > > No the scraping will not damage thin traces if you don't scrape with a corner. > > Some PCBs seem to be more prone to this clouding thing than others. I > believe they are not all the same epoxy, or maybe some aren't epoxy at > all. > > ST > > On 10/31/07, bagmik <bagmik@...> wrote: > > Hi everybody, > > > > removing toner from a PCB after etching leaves toner impregnating the > > epoxy, giving "black clouds" on it. > > > > Does anyone of you get the same ? > > > > Has anyone already solved the problem ? > > > > Mike.
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Re: TT technique, removing toner after etching leave part of it on the epoxy
2007-10-31 by dagmargoodboat
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