HN Theater @HNTheaterMonth

The best talks and videos of Hacker News.

Hacker News Comments on
Make plastic printed circuits with a standard laser cutter

Applied Science · Youtube · 81 HN points · 1 HN comments
HN Theater has aggregated all Hacker News stories and comments that mention Applied Science's video "Make plastic printed circuits with a standard laser cutter".
Youtube Summary
I developed a new chemical process to make double-sided PCBs with a laser cutter, and some common chemicals. This is intended to be used on SLA 3D-printed parts, but may work on many materials.


Refs:
http://infohouse.p2ric.org/ref/29/28004.pdf

http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.527.5817&rep=rep1&type=pdf

http://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/195088/3/chapter%202.pdf

https://sci-hub.tw/https://doi.org/10.1016/S0167-577X(03)00424-5

https://library.nrao.edu/public/memos/chem/CHEM_5.pdf

https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/48645791.pdf


Support Applied Science: https://www.patreon.com/AppliedScience
HN Theater Rankings

Hacker News Stories and Comments

All the comments and stories posted to Hacker News that reference this video.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z228xymQYho
lj3
interesting. Thanks!
bb88
The other approach is through a copper ink such as this one: http://copprint.com/
nikkwong
This looks cool and could be a much easier solution than the aforementioned laser/printing setup. Judging from the website though it doesn’t look like they have a product ready to go, is that true, and are there any alternatives? It would be nice if there was a filament I could just plug into my 3D printer and start using :p
bb88
I think googling "conductive" plus one of "3d filaments" or "t-shirt ink" or "epoxy" or "resin" or "nail polish" or "paint" is a good place to start.

I believe that company will probably sell the ink by the barrel full for industrial fabricators.

Sep 03, 2018 · 81 points, 26 comments · submitted by nadavami
mdaniel
I'm jealous of people who have such an elaborate workspace with so many toys and access to reagents. Still, it's super interesting to see all the engineering challenges that go into taking something from "works" into "work reliably"
bacon_waffle
I agree, the tools available now for tinkering are mind boggling! Of course, the other component is the time to spend on learning to use the tools, and for designing stuff to make with them...

With regards to chemistry - a staggering array of chemical supplies can be purchased from the hardware store, druggist, or supermarket; the trick is knowing what common name to look for, to get a particular chemical. Searching online for permutations of what you're looking for, and "household", "MSDS", or "common name" can yield some good results.

ethbro
> [16:45] And when I was getting up to about, you know... test number 66 or whatever here, it all started to fall into place...

Quotes that let you know you're doing real home science.

xt00
One of the advantages of the way FR4 PCBs for example are made is the following: 1) you can deposit a thin layer using an electroless process 2) then now that you have a continuous conducting surface you can electoplate to make a thick layer of copper that is quite strong and durable

Anyway, it would seem like with all this work he could have used the laser to define a photomask on copper clad board with some photosensitive material there, then just watch in the iron chloride solution as people have been doing for ages?

2 layer PCBs are really cheap these days and you don’t end up with vats of chemicals left over..

Anyway cool stuff, I’ve tried to do similar stuff and has always just found that paying $50 for a few PCBs is actually much more economical than this type of setup.

StavrosK
> 2 layer PCBs are really cheap these days and you don’t end up with vats of chemicals left over..

The problem I have is that I have to wait weeks and get a hundred PCBs when I only want one.

xt00
Yea check out pcbzone.net I’ve used a number of times for super fast boards. They are in New Zealand but you get stuff in like 3-5 days for even 4-6 layer boards for a very reasonable price. There are many companies like that now. If you are willing to spend around $50-100 for say 5 boards or less there are quite a few options for a few days of waiting.
StavrosK
Unfortunately, I'm just a hobbyist and can't justify that much money. It seems to be cheap, fast, good, choose two.
xt00
In the case of PCB's in most cases it takes hours to make stuff, and you need to buy components for the boards and pay for shipping, etc.. so I guess I understand not wanting to pay for something because we all wish it was free, but making PCB's either costs you a bunch of your own time, or money if you buy the components to populate -- which then takes a bunch more time, etc.. so its confusing to me that you are a hobbyist that may be interested in making PCB's, but spending say $100 is is too much money? I mean even buying a laser cutter / etcher is not cheap nor is a reasonably good 3d printer.. I guess I'm just saying it seems like a lot of people never take the plunge making PCB's mostly because they are worried they will make a mistake and "waste" the money, but that's a different point than it being "too expensive".. anyway, I'd say just give it a shot on one of the services that cost $50...
m1573rp34130dy
...this is why i horde ded electronics, i call it the morgue so go robeth the morgue for your franken-proto...
StavrosK
I'm not talking about assembly services, I'm only talking about PCB fabrication. When ten boards cost $10, paying $100 for one is too expensive, yes. I can just pay the extra $20 and get the faster shipping option.
xt00
https://www.pcbzone.net/User/QuoteArea.aspx?type=cal check that out.. you can get say 5 PCB's that are 25mm x 25mm 4 layers for ~50 euros. yea maybe one day it'll be free shipping at $10 for one board. But until then its more like minimum of $50 plus shipping for a small number of boards.
bacon_waffle
I tend to use dirtypcbs, which I don't think is the cheapest around anymore - maybe try https://www.seeedstudio.com/fusion_pcb.html too.

A batch of 12 (2-layer, 1oz, 6,6mil, roughly 5x10cm) boards I got made a couple weeks ago, which were a rush order DHL shipped to New Zealand, totalled roughly $60USD. Without rush processing and quick shipping, I think the same thing would've been a little over $20.

StavrosK
Seeed looks good, they offer a $1 for 3 deal, which with DHL 1-3 day shipping comes out to $34. Pretty decent, thanks.
RossBencina
In addition to the services already mentioned in this thread, this might help: PCBShopper is a price comparison site that will take your board dimensions and other parameters and list the cheapest sources: https://pcbshopper.com/
dthal
I've heard good things about oshpark[1] for hobbyists, but I personally have never used them.

[1] https://oshpark.com/

pathartl
I use OSH regularly for prototyping. Their boards are really good quality and I've been happy with them. Sometimes the production times aren't as fast as I'd like, but ordering quantities of 3 usually is very economical.
minxomat
Well, no. Services like JLPCB or AllPCB have a 1.5 day manufacturing time and both feature express shipping via DHL (APCB for free even). There are tons of services like these. Even 4 layer lead-free boards don't break the bank. MOQ is 1-5 on all of these services.

Even here in Germany, where local PCB manufacturing is usually very expensive compared to the options above, services like PCBJoker exist, which are only about 20 to 30 % more expensive.

StavrosK
DHL shopping is always more than 20 euros for me. I wouldn't call 35 euros for a PCB cheap.
minxomat
To which country? AllPCB doesn't charge anything for DHL to the US and Germany e.g. MOQ is 5pcs.
StavrosK
Greece, I'll check that out, thank you.

Looks like it's $20 including shipping, which is more than fair, thanks for the tip.

jlewallen
I had a good experience with AllPCB recently. They even reached out for clarification on an extraneous drl file I had included in the gerbers zip accidentally.
mdtusz
The whole reason for experimenting with this was to be able to create traces on 3d printed parts - the test runs were just on rectangular coupons for ease of testing and because he printed what looks like hundreds of them.
bayesian_horse
Ingenious method!
Hasz
What's even more interesting is that this is pretty accessible. Given fairly common equipment, at least in a hackerspace, you can make ~8 mil traces on plastic or FR4. Not only that, but you can make them in 3D and with plated vias.

This dude has some absolutely jaw dropping (sputtering, scanning electron microscope, waterjet etc) videos on his channel; it's definitely worth checking out the rest of his back catalogue.

6nf
Google tells me 'mil' is some kind of abbreviation for 'thou' or thousands of an inch which means 8 mil = 0.2mm
gh02t
It's an abbreviation for "mille", same root as the "milli" in millimeter. Common in electronics for describing trace widths and pitches, even outside of the US simply because there are lots of parts laid out in whole numbers of mils.

8 mil traces on a DIY circuit board is pretty good, it's good enough to be able to do some quite fine surface mount parts.

grzm
Also common for measuring thickness for films and foils:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thousandth_of_an_inch#Contexts...

HN Theater is an independent project and is not operated by Y Combinator or any of the video hosting platforms linked to on this site.
~ yaj@
;laksdfhjdhksalkfj more things
yahnd.com ~ Privacy Policy ~
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.