Marker suggestion for India - Use Kores Smoothline Permanent markers (thick tip), it is very etch-resistant. Don't use - Flair CD Marker, Artline CD Marker (worst of all, water-soluble).
@francomongillo2 жыл бұрын
Ciao Aden e complimenti per il video, io ho installato wizard circuit, ho fatto un progetto e va tutto ok la simulazione ok, ma ho un problema quando vado a convertire il gerber, se provo a inviare il file gerber su un simulatore online tipo quello della jlcpd il lato ramo e le perforazioni non vengono visualizzate come mai?. Potresti gentilmente aiutarmi a capire come si fa il gerber nel modo corretto? Ti ringrazio di cuore.
@eden12_penales2 жыл бұрын
Thanks.. You can use EasyEDA in generating Gerber file, you are also able to order directly from JLCPCB.
@francomongillo2 жыл бұрын
@@eden12_penales si hai ragione, ma il problema è un altro il file gerber che genera wizard circuit ha qualcosa che non va perchè JLCPCB mi ha detto che non va bene non si vedono le tracce di rame. Ma con easyeda come faccio? ilfile di wizard circuit si può aprire anche con easyeda? aiutooooo:(
@eden12_penales2 жыл бұрын
@Franco Mongillo kindly print first your circuit design from circuit wizard as guide, and then re-draw the design in EasyEDA. Check this video that I found (video courtesy: Ideas TV) kzbin.info/www/bejne/pqnJnJacg8yap6s
@francomongillo2 жыл бұрын
@@eden12_penales okkkkkkkk grazieeeee ora provo. :)
@francomongillo2 жыл бұрын
Ascolta hai un email? vorrei mandarti il file così magari lo vedi anche tu? ne sarei felice.
@tasmedic2 жыл бұрын
Have you tried different permanent markers for this? Which one seems to be the best?
@eden12_penales2 жыл бұрын
Any permanent marker can do
@SwapPartLLC Жыл бұрын
@@eden12_penales Not true. Some permanent markers will not survive the etching. Sharpies do not work, despite being "permanent." They used to, but apparently they changed the ink formula. I use a Staedtler Lumocolor 318-9 and get excellent results.
@SwapPartLLC Жыл бұрын
@user-hy6yq4uk8e Never tried one. I experimented a bit with using my 3D printer to draw traces, and it worked for what I needed it to do, but it's not very practical if you need to do anything with 0.85mm or smaller pitch. I did manage to do a breakout board for a PIC18 with 0.85mm pitch, but it required some manual corrections with microscope and needle to scrape away some of the marker. I'm at some point going to try to use photosensitive boards and use an LCD for masking the parts which shouldn't be exposed to UV. It's the same process used in resin based 3D printers. I think some screen printing is done that way too.
@spacewalker35192 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video. I've been doing all my projects on breadboards and vector boards. Some of the older things that I've taken apart appear to have been drawn by hand, not actually printed by a machine. That made me ask myself, how did they do this job before we had computers and printers? I just ordered some single sided boards and some pcb etchant. I'm ready to give this a go.