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'[EE] DIY Board Toner Removal?'
2005\03\31@220800
by
Gordon Williams
Hi All,
Any ideas what solvent can be used to remove the toner on a board once it
has been etched? I've tried acetone and white gas (naphtha camp fuel) and
those don't work well.
My first Brother printer had toner that could be easily removed with
acetone. One wipe and it was gone. With my new printer (another Brother)
the toner formula seems to have changed and acetone doesn't remove much.
I guess I could scrub it off, but then I would loose some copper as well.
Any ideas?
Regards,
Gordon Williams
2005\03\31@223426
by
Milosz Kardasinski
Try some Lacquer Thinner...it is a concoction of some really nasty
solvents that disolve pretty much anything. It has worked in
situations where acetone, MEK and xylene failed to the job at hand.
Cheers,
Milosz K.
On Mar 31, 2005 10:10 PM, Gordon Williams <spam_OUTg_willTakeThisOuT
cyberus.ca> wrote:
{Quote hidden}> Hi All,
>
> Any ideas what solvent can be used to remove the toner on a board once it
> has been etched? I've tried acetone and white gas (naphtha camp fuel) and
> those don't work well.
>
> My first Brother printer had toner that could be easily removed with
> acetone. One wipe and it was gone. With my new printer (another Brother)
> the toner formula seems to have changed and acetone doesn't remove much.
>
> I guess I could scrub it off, but then I would loose some copper as well.
>
> Any ideas?
>
> Regards,
>
> Gordon Williams
2005\03\31@233154
by
Herbert Graf
On Thu, 2005-03-31 at 22:10 -0500, Gordon Williams wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> Any ideas what solvent can be used to remove the toner on a board once it
> has been etched? I've tried acetone and white gas (naphtha camp fuel) and
> those don't work well.
>
> My first Brother printer had toner that could be easily removed with
> acetone. One wipe and it was gone. With my new printer (another Brother)
> the toner formula seems to have changed and acetone doesn't remove much.
>
> I guess I could scrub it off, but then I would loose some copper as well.
>
> Any ideas?
I use 320 grit wet sandpaper. You loose very little copper, and the
benefit is you end up with a very clean and nicely rough surface that
solder seems to like. Takes me about 2 minutes to do a 4"x6" board.
TTYL
-----------------------------
Herbert's PIC Stuff:
http://repatch.dyndns.org:8383/pic_stuff/
'[EE] DIY Board Toner Removal?'
2005\04\01@001535
by
Dave Lag
Indeed, works well on samsung toner. Ten dollars will get you a gallon
'round here.
D
Milosz Kardasinski wrote:
{Quote hidden}> Try some Lacquer Thinner...it is a concoction of some really nasty
> solvents that disolve pretty much anything. It has worked in
> situations where acetone, MEK and xylene failed to the job at hand.
>
> Cheers,
> Milosz K.
>
> On Mar 31, 2005 10:10 PM, Gordon Williams <
.....g_willKILLspam
@spam@cyberus.ca> wrote:
>
>>Hi All,
>>
>>Any ideas what solvent can be used to remove the toner on a board once it
>>has been etched? I've tried acetone and white gas (naphtha camp fuel) and
>>those don't work well.
>>
>>My first Brother printer had toner that could be easily removed with
>>acetone. One wipe and it was gone. With my new printer (another Brother)
>>the toner formula seems to have changed and acetone doesn't remove much.
>>
>>I guess I could scrub it off, but then I would loose some copper as well.
>>
>>Any ideas?
>>
>>Regards,
>>
>>Gordon Williams
2005\04\01@022258
by
Hulatt, Jon
|
Its known as "Cellulose Thinners" here in the UK, if that helps the OP.
{Quote hidden}> -----Original Message-----
> From:
piclist-bounces
KILLspammit.edu
> [
.....piclist-bouncesKILLspam
.....mit.edu] On Behalf Of Dave Lag
> Sent: 01 April 2005 06:20
> To: Microcontroller discussion list - Public.
> Subject: Re: [EE] DIY Board Toner Removal?
>
> Indeed, works well on samsung toner. Ten dollars will get you
> a gallon 'round here.
> D
>
> Milosz Kardasinski wrote:
> > Try some Lacquer Thinner...it is a concoction of some really nasty
> > solvents that disolve pretty much anything. It has worked in
> > situations where acetone, MEK and xylene failed to the job at hand.
> >
> > Cheers,
> > Milosz K.
> >
> > On Mar 31, 2005 10:10 PM, Gordon Williams <
EraseMEg_willspam_OUT
TakeThisOuTcyberus.ca> wrote:
> >
> >>Hi All,
> >>
> >>Any ideas what solvent can be used to remove the toner on a
> board once
> >>it has been etched? I've tried acetone and white gas (naphtha camp
> >>fuel) and those don't work well.
> >>
> >>My first Brother printer had toner that could be easily
> removed with
> >>acetone. One wipe and it was gone. With my new printer (another
> >>Brother) the toner formula seems to have changed and
> acetone doesn't remove much.
> >>
> >>I guess I could scrub it off, but then I would loose some
> copper as well.
> >>
> >>Any ideas?
> >>
> >>Regards,
> >>
> >>Gordon Williams
>
> -
2005\04\01@031136
by
ThePicMan
At 23.31 2005.03.31 -0500, you wrote:
>On Thu, 2005-03-31 at 22:10 -0500, Gordon Williams wrote:
>> Hi All,
>>
>> Any ideas what solvent can be used to remove the toner on a board once it
>> has been etched? I've tried acetone and white gas (naphtha camp fuel) and
>> those don't work well.
>>
>> My first Brother printer had toner that could be easily removed with
>> acetone. One wipe and it was gone. With my new printer (another Brother)
>> the toner formula seems to have changed and acetone doesn't remove much.
>>
>> I guess I could scrub it off, but then I would loose some copper as well.
>>
>> Any ideas?
>
>I use 320 grit wet sandpaper. You loose very little copper, and the
>benefit is you end up with a very clean and nicely rough surface that
>solder seems to like. Takes me about 2 minutes to do a 4"x6" board.
I now use rs-components' 216-2706.
2005\04\01@102146
by
Bob Ammerman
>> Any ideas what solvent can be used to remove the toner on a board once it
>> has been etched? I've tried acetone and white gas (naphtha camp fuel)
>> and
>> those don't work well.
>>
>> My first Brother printer had toner that could be easily removed with
>> acetone. One wipe and it was gone. With my new printer (another
>> Brother)
>> the toner formula seems to have changed and acetone doesn't remove much.
>>
>> I guess I could scrub it off, but then I would loose some copper as well.
>>
>> Any ideas?
>
> I use 320 grit wet sandpaper. You loose very little copper, and the
> benefit is you end up with a very clean and nicely rough surface that
> solder seems to like. Takes me about 2 minutes to do a 4"x6" board.
Steel wool?
Bob Ammerman
RAm Systems
2005\04\01@105211
by
Jack Smith
|
{Quote hidden}>> Any ideas what solvent can be used to remove the toner on a board
>> once it has been etched? I've tried acetone and white gas (naphtha
>> camp fuel) and those don't work well.
>>
>> My first Brother printer had toner that could be easily removed with
>> acetone. One wipe and it was gone. With my new printer (another
>> Brother)
>> the toner formula seems to have changed and acetone doesn't remove much.
>>
>> I guess I could scrub it off, but then I would loose some copper as well.
>>
>> Any ideas?
>
> I use 320 grit wet sandpaper. You loose very little copper, and the
> benefit is you end up with a very clean and nicely rough surface that
> solder seems to like. Takes me about 2 minutes to do a 4"x6" board.
>Steel wool?
>Bob Ammerman
>RAm Systems
I once had a PCB that had been cleaned with steel wool before being
assembled and found that small steel "whiskers" had worked their way into
strange places, including underneath a connector. It was not fun to find all
the resulting short circuits. Ever since, I've been cautious about steel
wool and PCBs.
I use a household abrasive cleaner, such as Comet, with a sponge or a
Scotch-brite pad, to remove the unwanted toner. It is milder than sandpaper
and also yields a good surface finish.
Jack
2005\04\01@114031
by
Mike Hord
> Any ideas what solvent can be used to remove the toner on a board once it
> has been etched? I've tried acetone and white gas (naphtha camp fuel) and
> those don't work well.
I use something called "Citrusolv", only because it's what we have around.
I gather it's a common-ish solvent in biomedical labs, but past that I
can't say.
If I had to guess, I'd say it's pretty similar to most grocery-store available
citrus-based cleaners. The toner runs off quite readily, and I have yet to
identify any undesirable side effects. Plus, the room smells orangey-fresh!
Mike H.
2005\04\07@165325
by
jrem
aerosol brake part cleaner. recycle with used oil or paint, or just
let it evaporate. works like a charm on laser printer toner.
--- Gordon Williams <g_will
spam_OUTcyberus.ca> wrote:
{Quote hidden}> Hi All,
>
> Any ideas what solvent can be used to remove the toner on a board
> once it
> has been etched? I've tried acetone and white gas (naphtha camp
> fuel) and
> those don't work well.
>
> My first Brother printer had toner that could be easily removed with
> acetone. One wipe and it was gone. With my new printer (another
> Brother)
> the toner formula seems to have changed and acetone doesn't remove
> much.
>
> I guess I could scrub it off, but then I would loose some copper as
> well.
>
> Any ideas?
>
> Regards,
>
> Gordon Williams
>
> --
2005\04\07@171814
by
Gordon Williams
I went out and bought some lacquer thinner as someone suggested. It worked
well. The litre will last me the next 100 years.
Regards,
Gordon Williams
{Original Message removed}
2005\04\08@050001
by
Michael Rigby-Jones
|
>-----Original Message-----
>From: @spam@piclist-bouncesKILLspam
mit.edu [KILLspampiclist-bouncesKILLspam
mit.edu]
>Sent: 07 April 2005 22:21
>To: Microcontroller discussion list - Public.
>Subject: Re: [EE] DIY Board Toner Removal?
>
>
>I went out and bought some lacquer thinner as someone
>suggested. It worked well. The litre will last me the next 100 years.
>
As long as the top is screwed on tightly!
Mike
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2005\04\08@055357
by
ThePicMan
|
On the other hand.. it would be great if there was some chemicals able
to "eat" paper while leaving the toner on the copper clad.
Anyone has some idea on some substance able to do this to paper, while
being inert on the toner and copper?
At 13.53 2005.04.07 -0700, you wrote:
{Quote hidden}>aerosol brake part cleaner. recycle with used oil or paint, or just
>let it evaporate. works like a charm on laser printer toner.
>
>
>--- Gordon Williams <
RemoveMEg_willTakeThisOuT
cyberus.ca> wrote:
>> Hi All,
>>
>> Any ideas what solvent can be used to remove the toner on a board
>> once it
>> has been etched? I've tried acetone and white gas (naphtha camp
>> fuel) and
>> those don't work well.
>>
>> My first Brother printer had toner that could be easily removed with
>> acetone. One wipe and it was gone. With my new printer (another
>> Brother)
>> the toner formula seems to have changed and acetone doesn't remove
>> much.
>>
>> I guess I could scrub it off, but then I would loose some copper as
>> well.
>>
>> Any ideas?
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> Gordon Williams
>>
>> --
2005\04\08@092325
by
Mike Hord
> On the other hand.. it would be great if there was some chemicals able
> to "eat" paper while leaving the toner on the copper clad.
>
> Anyone has some idea on some substance able to do this to paper, while
> being inert on the toner and copper?
Fire?
Mike H.
2005\04\08@100611
by
ThePicMan
At 08.23 2005.04.08 -0500, you wrote:
>> On the other hand.. it would be great if there was some chemicals able
>> to "eat" paper while leaving the toner on the copper clad.
>>
>> Anyone has some idea on some substance able to do this to paper, while
>> being inert on the toner and copper?
>
>Fire?
As a first thought, I had that too, but the toner won't survive I'm sure..
2005\04\08@110154
by
Russell McMahon
>>> Anyone has some idea on some substance able to do this to paper,
>>> while
>>> being inert on the toner and copper?
>>
>>Fire?
>
> As a first thought, I had that too, but the toner won't survive I'm
> sure..
How about water and agitation.
Maybe a dilute chlorine solution.
RM
2005\04\08@220920
by
Martin K
Warm water?
--
Martin
ThePicMan wrote:
> On the other hand.. it would be great if there was some chemicals able
> to "eat" paper while leaving the toner on the copper clad.
>
> Anyone has some idea on some substance able to do this to paper, while
> being inert on the toner and copper?
--
Martin K
http://wwia.org/sgroup/biofuel/
2005\04\08@232955
by
jrem
you don't have the right paper. try clay based paper, magazines use
it, try some different magazines until you get the one that doesn't
leave any lint. My success happened to be a Carvin guitar catalog.
--- Martin K <spamBeGonemartin-distlistsspamBeGone
nnytech.net> wrote:
{Quote hidden}> Warm water?
> --
> Martin
>
> ThePicMan wrote:
> > On the other hand.. it would be great if there was some chemicals
> able
> > to "eat" paper while leaving the toner on the copper clad.
> >
> > Anyone has some idea on some substance able to do this to paper,
> while
> > being inert on the toner and copper?
>
> --
> Martin K
>
http://wwia.org/sgroup/biofuel/
> --
2005\04\09@031452
by
ThePicMan
At 20.29 2005.04.08 -0700, you wrote:
>you don't have the right paper. try clay based paper, magazines use
>it, try some different magazines until you get the one that doesn't
>leave any lint. My success happened to be a Carvin guitar catalog.
But you then reuse it, or throw it off?
In the latter case, buying a magazine for each PCB may not be really
too convenient.
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