I have a commercial etching tank, composed of formed acrylic plastic and two fish tank pumps. It's designed for sodium persulphate etchant. I can get a pool shock persulphate etchant for about 10 dollars for 1 KG, and you need about 1 KG for a single run (no idea how many boards that is, but it's about 1-2 gallons of etchant). The normal HCl/H2O2 etchant that I use would no doubt eat the pumps to pieces. So a question would be: Can I use high concentration H2O2 (say from a beauty supply store, no idea how much that might be, but presumably less than the 1.25 dollars/quart that I can get H2O2 for...)? Just by itself, I suspect that it might not work, would activating that etchant with a little chloride ions (perhaps salt?) work? Has anyone looked for a substitute for Sodium persulphate (potassium persulphate will also work, but equally expensive, I think)? Is there an etchant that will work for this kind of situation? Harvey
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Substitute for Sodium Persulphate
2016-05-28 by Harvey White
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