You can also make custom circuits with a exacto-knife. Don't let not having a cnc hold you back.
@billmckillip15612 жыл бұрын
You can also connect your components with soldered wires. Don't let not having an exacto-knife hold you back.
@sebastian197452 жыл бұрын
Yep, I did this once (around year 2000). The PCB was approx 1x3cm, double side, the components (I think that were 2-3 resistors, 1 or 2 capacitors, one transistor and one small audio output transformer) were THD and some of them I mounted as SMD (resistors); it was a mosquito repellent audio oscillator and worked at first try. All was made by hand, from design to drilling holes, with no tools other than a soldering iron. I make it to win a bet and I won it.
@Lozoot22 жыл бұрын
@@billmckillip1561 You can also connect your components by twisting wires together all janky-like and securing it with hot glue. Don't let not having a soldering iron hold you back.
@alexandrevaliquette19412 жыл бұрын
You can also use Crayola and draw things on your walls and pretend they are working by magic. Don't let not having a CNC hold you back.
@ronnetgrazer3622 жыл бұрын
@@Lozoot2 Components? You were living in paradise! In my days, we didn't have any components. Different kinds of soil and our own bodily secretions is what we had to work with. And we were happy!
@outofdarts2 жыл бұрын
Dude you’re a madman. Love this video.
@Alkenes1302 жыл бұрын
I just wanted to toss out that I'm here for Zack not for a category. Your videos and lives give me motivation and inspiration to work on my own projects. Follow the dopamine and takes us along!
@heroslippy66662 жыл бұрын
I fully agree! Zack is so fun to watch
@raphaelmorgan23072 жыл бұрын
same, I like watching the 3d printing and what have you but I like him specifically bc he's funny and relatable
@sauces13132 жыл бұрын
That Sound of Silence remix did not disappoint. Thanks for running this machine for this purpose. Very informative. And entertaining as usual.
@JesseHughson2 жыл бұрын
I appreciated it and will recall it warmly
@jthoward2 жыл бұрын
It was...exceptional
@slartimus2 жыл бұрын
The song was good, but the thing that made me mildly spit-take my cereal (not some kind of weird euphemism) was when the eyebrow waggling escalated to ridiculous levels at 6:20.
@sauces13132 жыл бұрын
@@slartimus Zack is ridiculous, and I love him for it.
@FilamentFriday2 жыл бұрын
Great work. I’ve CNC’d many boards similar to how you did it. I finally bought a Bantam Tools PCBMill and it’s like night and day difference. The biggest advantage is the software. 1000 times better than flatcam and designed to work with the machine. Plus it mills holes not drills. If you ever get a chance to buy one(since the one I bought is discontinued and replaced by their new design) I highly recommend it. That board you had could be completed in roughly 30 minutes. For vias I just solder wire to the pad on each side. Glad you discovered small end mills. I use 1/64 for detail, 1/32 for clearing and 1/8 for cutting the outline. Great video.
@longpham-sj5sv2 жыл бұрын
uh, in flatcam, you can choose to mill big holes.
@1pcfred2 жыл бұрын
The machine we see here is clearly capable of milling PCBs. Buying a machine just for the software seems a bit lunatic to me.
@Lozoot22 жыл бұрын
Even though I haven't played tf2 in years it holds enough of a special place in my heart for me to feel personally attacked by the straight facts you spat. The worst part is I 100% agree.
@der94alex2 жыл бұрын
making a lot of snapped tools with the snapmaker, call me unsurprised 😂
@josuelservin2 жыл бұрын
It's a genius marketing strategy, it guarantees you never forget the company name...
@CockroachSlidy2 жыл бұрын
You need mesh leveling for v-bits. It's actually quite easy to do but I don't know if it possible with this particular machine. Basically the bit and the board are both conductive. Connect a couple of wires and use them as an end stop. Whenever the tool touches the board it should send a signal to the Z end stop input on the CNC.
@SharkyMoto2 жыл бұрын
if you do it that way, your v bit is dull by the time you are ready to mill.
@fabian8992 жыл бұрын
@@SharkyMoto you dont have to use the v bit to create the mesh
@ericcmcgraw2 жыл бұрын
@@SharkyMoto How would lightly touching a copper surface dull the same bit that is going to violently mill through said copper? Can you explain the material science going on there?
@leobla7442 жыл бұрын
@@ericcmcgraw the bit cant turn normally while your are leveling, so it isnt cutting but rather just pushing down on the bit.
@ericcmcgraw2 жыл бұрын
@@leobla744 yes, neverthless the hardness of the materials are not affected by the speed, so the bit would still just dent the copper, not vice versa.
@petermerz27042 жыл бұрын
Wow, that was an expensive board to make with all of the bits you broke. But to get the results you want, you have to experiment! Bravo, may you have learned from your experience! Happy days and model on! 😎
@RegularOldDan2 жыл бұрын
FINALLY! A multi-purpose machine that ACTUALLY INCLUDES proper laser safety panels! No relying on everyone in the house walking around with laser shades all the time.
@JGWalrus Жыл бұрын
It didn't. That's an upgrade
@aperson101 Жыл бұрын
That is an upgrade sadly
@MaxC_1 Жыл бұрын
Just use an enclosure with a camera to monitor the cheapos which have no laser safety panels . It just works.
@MrMegabart2 жыл бұрын
"when tf2 works, it's a coincidence" I damn lost it good job!
@ben_burnes2 жыл бұрын
The projects are always banging, but your script writing honestly is the best in the business.
@drewsipher2 жыл бұрын
Good stuff! A few hints to make your life easier next time. 1) Use oil when routing to help with smoother cuts. 2) Afterwards, use 800 grit sand paper really lightly to remove the ragged edges. This makes silkscreening and soldering easier. 3) If your bit feels off center, it's probably the collet, not the bit. Tighten the collet all the way without a bit in it. Then loosen it off until you can put your bit in. This helps center those cheap collets in the ring.
@rubdulbah32012 жыл бұрын
Forget the whole cnc circuit board cutting! I'm more impressed by how you named all the sponsors at the end with a straight face.
@ARVash2 жыл бұрын
I used to use a laser printer (from the library), clothes iron, and some homemade CuCl2( some mixture of HCl H2O2 and one pre 1982 penny) to etch my own boards, I erred on the side of over etching, bridged the missing connections with enameled wire, and it did work.
@radinm72582 жыл бұрын
Yep I used to do exactly that back in high school, circa 1990. I got really good at it and made useful circuits borrowed out of magazines and with a bit of help from Radio shack for acid, PCB clad etc. I used a dc motor out of a toy car, coupled to a 1mm drill bit to hand drill the holes. Oh the good old fun days!!
@olik1362 жыл бұрын
10:15 OMG it just dawned on me... when I import PDFs and Jpegs into Autocad I often have to scale them by 2.54 to get it right... probably because the files are in dots per INCH and I want them in meters now...
@cadenakadeath2 жыл бұрын
hey machinist here, i have a few possibly helpful tips: 1. when using a flat endmill try not to plunge straight down but instead helix into the material. 2. you can find a lot of bits at machinist shops like herrics, MCSdirect, Grainger, Shars, Kennametal, ect. 3. some too materials and setups work better than others (HSS v.s Carbide, or 4 flute vs 2 flute) the harder the material the slower you can spin the spindle with larger feed same with more flutes. 4. Slower spindle speeds will make your tool wear down slower within reason.
@TheLordNemesis2 жыл бұрын
Great results for a first try! I've made quite a few boards for hobby and professional purposes (mostly prototypes), I have a Sainsmart 3018-ProVer, which is very cheap compared to some of the dedicated PCB mills out there, but works very well for PCB milling. For control I use Candle, a very simple but capable little CNC software. I've gathered some experience over the years which I'd like to share: - Clamp your board down firmly with at least four clamps. Tape works, but most PCB blanks are slightly bent, and if the tape doesn't hold it down perfectly, it may flex when you try to mill it, leading to inconsistent depth of cut. - Install a leveling sensor. The simplest option would be two wires, one attached to the PCB, the other one to the milling bit. Alligator clips work fine. Most CNC boards have some sort of input for additional sensors. - With the aforementioned sensor, level the PCB blank. One probe point every 10mm should be sufficient. Having a flat surface is not enough for the kind of tolerances we want, so software compensation is mandatory. All professional PCB mills do this. Candle works well for the software part, but most CNC software should have a similar feature. - Precision end mills are nice, but quite expensive and fragile. I had good results with 30 to 60 degree V-tips. For holes, I use normal PCB drills. It's a bit more work to change the drill size for different holes, but milling holes takes way longer, especially if you have lots of them. - Cheap bits are a bit of a gamble, sometimes they are good, sometimes they are garbage. But it's still cheaper to experiment a bit than to break too many high quality bits. One you find a type that works well, stock a few for future accidents. - You want good quality bits, especially for isolation routing. Good bits cut with very little noise, and there should be no burrs around the cuts when you wipe over them with your fingers. - Some sellers stock FR1 PCB blanks. Those don't have fiberglass in them, so they are way easier to mill and less dangerous, but they aren't as sturdy as FR4. For most applications they are absolutely fine though. - Try to stick with sigle sided boards when possible. If you need two sides, you can connect the vias with copper wire, but most board designers will assume that all holes are plated through, and you can't solder both sides on all components (e.g. capacitors). This might lead to design flaws. Rivets are an option, but a lot of work. - Don't bother with solder resist, it's messy, it takes forever and if you solder carefully, it's not needed for functionality. - When the board is finished and tested, cover the copper side with protective lacquer. You can get that stuff in spray cans, there are special non-conductive types for PCBs. Keeps the moisture out and your boards look shiny and new even after years. Dries in a few hours. Also prevents shorts, but don't rely on that. Happy milling, I hope you can speed up some projects in the future!
@cyn0_2 жыл бұрын
This is one of best vids you’ve ever done, that production value baby! Keep it up Zach, love it!
@StingrayForLife2 жыл бұрын
I would watch a two hour cut of this, no hassle. Really interesting and cool!
@MrVolt2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate the genuine level of perseverance after constant bit breakage! Sound effect game was on point for this ep too
@MagmaBow7 ай бұрын
love your portal stuff!
@ZimTachyon Жыл бұрын
You deserve ten times the subscriptions. You are very entertaining while delivering a terrifyingly specific subject. :)
@Brett_is_Veng2 жыл бұрын
"We're going to machine our way from hot garbage to premium garbage like the dumpster behind a wholefoods" - youre a frikin genius Zack, love your work. I saw a guy called bitluni do a circuit board milling project using a cheap chinease desktop milling machine, he might have some tips for you, check him out.
@jeffsabel93632 жыл бұрын
Your script writing is superb! This was a very informative video and I enjoyed it. Thank you for all the thought you put in to this channel.
@SeanHodgins2 жыл бұрын
Time to invest in Micro Center.
@tibr2 жыл бұрын
My dad got a snapmaker A350 recently and it is so wonderful to finally be able to make pcbs at home, it has been a dream of mine for a really long time :D
@drewpd72 жыл бұрын
That was pretty cool stuff! I make my pcb with a silhouette 4 vinyl cutter. Stick it on the board. Acid wash. Peel sticker off and dremel press drill the holes out. Way faster then 2 hours. But I have to manually drill
@ArrowRaider2 жыл бұрын
The singing is magnificent. I was pleased to see the turn of fate at the end! Great work
@JD-lx2yf2 жыл бұрын
This was just a sponsor for MicroCenter. Love the work, loved the video. Keep up the good work.
@artrock81752 жыл бұрын
I used to show up just for the technical information, but I keep coming back for the never ending stream of comedy! Zack, you are a LEGEND!!
@SharkyMoto2 жыл бұрын
if you coat the copper with something, laser away everywhere you dont need copper, you can also use the machine to etch pcbs... OH and before i forget, you can also use any old resin printer, just get yourself one of those uv reactive pcb blanks, make a 1 layer print in the shape of your pcb, etch it and you got yourself a perfect pcb with no tools in a very short time! also, no jagged edges and no microcenter.
@1pcfred2 жыл бұрын
Yeah but he got a free CNC machine.
@SharkyMoto2 жыл бұрын
@@1pcfred i know... i know, but with resin printers beeing CHEAP, using that would be epic, you can still use the cnc for actual cnc tasks like drilling the holes
@TheVideoGuardian2 жыл бұрын
Have you actually tried that? I would think that the laser could easily damage or even remove the hair thin copper right along with the mask. You'd still need a mill for holes/vias, and a I don't think a resin printer would have any means of aligning the image with the board. (Unless it's a single sided board with only SMD, or you're willing to drill everything by hand.) On a laser/cnc combo like this machine you can use registration holes like he did to get the laser and mill in more or less perfect alignment, so the laser could probably help in other ways like maybe for marking silkscreen, or even cutting an SMD template. Most 3d printers could be modded to take a laser head (ignoring software), so that technique sounds interesting. Ferric chloride is much cheaper than a pack of end-mils and arguably less messy than milling dust.
@1pcfred2 жыл бұрын
@@TheVideoGuardian maybe you need a mill for holes or vias but I have a dedicated high speed drill press. I don't drill boards on my CNC machine when I isolation route them. I drill them by hand with my drill press. I can't be asked to do all of the bit changes on my CNC it'd take. A 3 jaw chuck is a lot easier to work with. I'm very particular about part fit in boards too. One size does not fit all. Plus I just like drilling boards out. If I didn't then I wouldn't do what I do.
@1pcfred2 жыл бұрын
@@SharkyMoto I have a CNC machine but I don't drill boards with it. Changing bits with collet chucks kinda sucks. I also have a high speed mini drill press that drills PCBs out brilliantly too. It's why I have it.
@jonjimihendrix9 ай бұрын
1) Make a 1-line Gcode file with the M21 command that you can run after E-Stop 2) Nice voice! Love the video, died laughing. Came back from the grave to write this comment. Remember me as I was. 3) Order bulk bits. You’ll use them. Trust me.
@GrantSR2 жыл бұрын
I used to be a CAM/CAD operator at a custom printed circuit board manufacturer. A) You don't remove the locator pins. You use shorter ones. B) You program the G-code to drill the locator holes first, then pause. You set the pins. THEN you do all the rest, even on the first side. Relying on the tape alone can allow the board to shift as the bits push their way along, laterally. C) I had to write custom GW-BASIC (yup, a LONG time ago) to check for things and automatically modify the generated G-code. Hand editing G-code is a losing game because there are to many opportunities for human error, and those errors almost ALWAYS cost money. D) A vacuum bed will hold those boards flat AND release them without frustration as soon as you turn off the vacuum. E) You are far, FAR better off laser printing your circuits onto transparency film (once you have calibrated the exact size of the print) than machining away copper. Most good laser printers have a setting to adjust the density of the print. Set that to the maximum so light doesn't leak through the black printed areas and cause there to be less resist left there than should be to get a clean etch. What black to the naked eye can still let a lot of light through.
@liveen2 жыл бұрын
somehow I never realized you had ADHD, but now I have a couple questions! 1. Are you medicated? It can be really hard to tell with how varying the ADHD symptoms can be so forgive me for not being sure 2. If you are, or if you are not but you have tried them, did you notice a large improvement in your productivity etc? For me personally, it basically started a full-on life change for me. I went from 24/7 gaming and music production, no house chores, no nothing, to slowly finding that I really, really fucking like being productive, learning new hobbies etc and now I'm almost a year in and I wouldn't even recognize myself last year. Electronics, DIY, 3D printing, CNC, all of it has completely filled my eyes and head. 3. If you are NOT, how do you work around the issues caused by ADHD, like lack of productivity, focus, will to live, more productivity, mass murder, maintaining the life you want to etc? Sorry if this is alot, I ramble in the mornings when my meds are just kicking in and its usually on youtube comments
@TinNguyen-HEICA Жыл бұрын
I followed you trying the 0.2mm milling bit and found out that it just broke instantaneously. I tried with a bunch of bits I can find and the one that gave me the best result was the 10 degree V bit 0.1 or 0.2mm 1/8 shank. The bit was extremely cheap and the result was astonishing. My result was so good that I can compare it to the $3000 Wegstr machine. Hopefully somebody can read this and don't have to waste time and money on bits.
@frangovisck2 ай бұрын
I really appreciate your comment. That will save time.
@mattw79492 жыл бұрын
I fumbled my way through cnc'ing circuit boards a few years back, and had good luck with an aluminum spoil board, superglue (rather than carpet tape), and acetone. helped keep things flat. I had dedicated alignment pin holes that I'd design into the boards, and they had teenie-tiny ground points on them to which I'd set the CNC x-y zero using a usb microscope. Yes, these pins were made from my vast collection of broken endmills.
@panwall13272 жыл бұрын
The first steps to being okay at something is to suck at something. You are well on your way to greatness!
@flamingoKnight2 жыл бұрын
Hi Zack, I'm also using Flatcam and a CNC for my professional(nah) PCB making endeavors. I've went through the same caveats and mistakes you've been through when I first started a couple of years ago, so here's some tips and tricks to improve your PCB quality. -I don't have a bed leveller tool, so I offset my zero everytime I'm going to etch something. Trick here is to start the spindle and lowering the bit oh-so-delicately, with about 0.1mms every step. The moment you hear an etching sound, move it upwards by one step and start the program. -Find the floating point precision of your CNC. My CNC works at a 0.00001 precision, so my isolation geometry code lowers at Z-0.00001 for accurate isolations. -Sandpaper the hell out of your etched copper! Milling will only slightly move the copper and not going to magically make it disappear. If you sandpaper it, you will have a better end product and possibly avoid shorts. -If you have approximately x3 more time, I suggest you create a ground plane and etch it also. This gives the PCB a non-copper area to avoid possible shorts but damn it it takes a lot of time. -This PCB didn't have any tiny SMD components, but in time you will come to realize that isolation routing is not possible for routes less than about 0.7mms. I suggest that next time you should make a test routes to see what your machine is capable of, and use/create routes accordingly. I've lost too many boards wasted trying to use trace paths to a TMP117! -My personal opinion when it comes to DIY PCB manufacturing is etching it with a laser cutter. I see that your device has a laser cutter, but 1.6 Watts is probably not going to do the job. Kindly check out this video to see the full process: /watch?v=RuSg7-hMaQg Regards,
@1pcfred2 жыл бұрын
heh that's what I do too. Just BS the Z touch off. Running the path a few times does clean the job up. Don't use SMD garbage and that's that solved. If you don't have a pick and place machine then SMD really doesn't make any sense for you to use anyways. They invented SMT just to screw the DIY community. So why use something that's actively against you? 1.8W isn't a laser cutter. Well, maybe it could cut thin acetate or something? Tissue paper?
@squirrelmaster92 жыл бұрын
CNC machinist here, You're killing me! I've made every one of these mistakes myself and at least once it has got me fired! I haven't laughed this hard in ages.
@SkaForFood2 жыл бұрын
I've been wanting to make a custom keyboard, potentially a lot of them, with PCBs. And now I know that I DON'T want to do that so thanks!
@devinmastrio67302 жыл бұрын
It all started when i saw a 42 minute video on filament and i said "How could there be 42 minutes of filament?" now I've found my favorite page in youtube!
@jlco2 жыл бұрын
2:35 That had to be one of the last references I would have expected in a video about making PCBs.
@villageidiot8718 Жыл бұрын
Some of the most entertaining videos I've seen on KZbin
@andrewwhittle50942 жыл бұрын
“Sets the system to bald eagles…” I am dying. Funniest thing I have heard in a long time. Perfect delivery. Oh man, thank you for that laugh. I really needed it.
@Woodledude2 жыл бұрын
I just got that joke because of this comment. Thank you.
@hamdawgms2 жыл бұрын
idk how you havnt hit a mil. Amazing personality and content keep it up pls!
@jlnrdeep2 жыл бұрын
Such a puntastic video, great work as always
@akm56112 жыл бұрын
Hi Zack you are awesome and an inspiration. Use finger diel gouge to double check the board before you cut. Chances are it will not be flat. Instead of carpet tape use screws and shims to clamp the blank. I was a cnc machinist for a very long time and that's how it works with that. Hope I helped. When you cut a dial gauges are your best friends.
@jaromirgaines79942 жыл бұрын
You got a good and entertaining personality bro, I appreciate your content
@arniesneider71632 жыл бұрын
Use the Flatcam Beta, it is much better. To enable mesh bed leveling for cnc on the machine you would have to hack it a bit. There must be a z-probe pin that you can use? If that works you can do mesh bed leveling with bCNC.
@bewaretheintertubes2 жыл бұрын
Bud, I've been subbed to your channel for a while now and EVERY time you put a new video out it's even better. This shit is getting insane.
@RobRutkowski2 жыл бұрын
Your videos are very high quality. It's funny because your audience by topic is necessarily not mainstream. I wonder if you had a mainstream show if you'd be in the top 5? I think you certainly have the talent for it.
@Rscapeextreme4472 жыл бұрын
Man thats incredible, you are a pioneer in this sort of thing it seems
@sethpolevoi40272 жыл бұрын
If only the discord could have notified me of this video! I spent 3 hours depressed, lonely and board until Now where I’m just lonely
@OG_Gauntlet2 жыл бұрын
I can’t wait till you hit 1 mil subscribers, your vids are amazing keep ups the good work!
@cyqry2 жыл бұрын
Dude's really got it out for TF2 today. Take my subscription, you earned it.
@enekuda052 жыл бұрын
I bought a snapmaker 2.0 A350 during pre-order. I'm sad I've been so busy 3d printing for 2 years I haven't had much time.to even experiment with CNC or laser (I've also procrastinated building my own enclosure for lazer and CNC work so I don't cloud up my basement or blind my kids lol I absolutely love the thing and it's cool to see big guys using them for stuff like this
@rhyfalta96972 жыл бұрын
What nice „sound of silence“ song at 10:25. awesome stuff, awesome video, funny & informational
@thecatofnineswords2 жыл бұрын
Oddly, glass dust - unlike ground up moon rocks - is not pure cancer. Something about its organic nature means our lungs can actually digest and remove it. I'm really happy to see a cnc mill successfully engrave a pcb. As you discovered, it's hard! Good work!
@joshjerauld17272 жыл бұрын
Loved this episode to "bits!" I've used a diamond tipped tool on an ancient engraver, with a spring loaded collet in the 'z' axis and spindle turned off. Did great work dragging sharp lines on anodized aluminum, maybe a robust tool like that could take on .0014" of copper?
@germas3692 жыл бұрын
Your videos are awesome! Thank you for putting so much work into them
@KHFilms2 жыл бұрын
"Everything's better with a freaking laser" Most adorable Dr. Evil impersonation. Ever.
@corabob22 жыл бұрын
This video has made me feel so much more competent about my projects and learning curve. Sometimes it feels like getting a new machine is its own version of smash it till you understand how to suck less.
@vancehines562 Жыл бұрын
Great Video.The behavior cnc control "remembering last feedrate indefinitely" like Many G codes is referred to as Modal . CNC Control interprets the meaning XYZ IJK etc based on Mode. G20 inch mode G21 metric etc. G90 and G91 for example are Absolute or Incremental Mode , G00 and G01 are rapid move or feedrate (F) move . G02 and G03 are cw or ccw arc mode. Some controls treat different commands as modal.
@jordanbritten80312 жыл бұрын
I loved the content! Could you use the laser engraver to burn in your circuit pattern on masking tape and spray with conductive paint?
@ronnetgrazer3622 жыл бұрын
And then electoplate that paint for usable conductivity? Still not the worst idea.
@sonicsupersam7793 Жыл бұрын
ok, now I want to see you do the solder resist.
@flodachieftori2 жыл бұрын
Regarding the cutline width problem with v-bits: There are attachments called Engraving Milling Depth Regulator or similar that solve this issue. It also helps if the fiberglass material is not stuck down exactly flat.
@kristiansims2 жыл бұрын
I hope this video takes off because it’s way cooler than mere 3D printing!
@littlebunnywar2 жыл бұрын
So glad i found your vid. I've been wondering for years what wheezy meant when he said "the combination is the G-Code." Yay learning.
@nekkomemes36472 жыл бұрын
Man you make the best videos, i can't take my eyes off, or else i feel like ima lose interesting information.
@YourConsole2 жыл бұрын
"you don't level the bed you mill a level surface into the bed" I died. Excellent comedic presentation.
@dragonpjb Жыл бұрын
Seriously, why wouldn't you buy a few extra bits when you go? They are consumables, you will use extras eventually.
@barrymayson24922 жыл бұрын
I used to use an auto leveling software when I used to mill PCBs . It was another step took a bit time but worked well . But haven't used self milling for a while now. I got some good results with small v bits using it.
@haley80042 жыл бұрын
2:28 Haha that deflection when the bit goes into plastic
@OddlyIncredible2 жыл бұрын
I have a desktop CNC mill that I use for PCBs - it can cut traces down to 8 mils thanks to an extremely low runout spindle, and it's also beefy enough to mill 1/2" / 12mm aluminum plate. I used it to mil metal parts for my 3D printer.
@kvf2712 жыл бұрын
This is a comedy channel right? You're killing me!, I'm cramping up from all the amazing jokes!
@JoanMendoza2 жыл бұрын
Oh, wow, thanks for including the instructions.
@TheElectronicDilettante7 ай бұрын
Hopefully this reaches you 2 years ago so as to save you a bunch of headaches. 1. Set Height Map 2. Use a 30deg Spiral Engraving bit(please, just the tip) 3. You need to blow on it once the tip is in. Seriously, you need an air assist to clear the cuttings away from the bit path. Great videos, by the way.
@adambourne87602 жыл бұрын
Awesome to see, the mini rivets were a great idea! I'd be interested in seeing if you could add a silk screen or something to stop random debris being able to short your board out if it fell ontop of it. Even if its just smearing hotglue over it and cut out holes for your pads
@jacors51153 ай бұрын
Vacuum spoil board for your circuit boards. Then do like a .02 inlay into the the spoil board with fillets at the corners and lay the circuit board into the inlay not vacuum locked to the spoil board and aligned perfectly into the inlay
@trevor4182 Жыл бұрын
I subbed at "1600mW of coherent photonic gravy".
@jared63262 жыл бұрын
Love the video! I'm excited to see what shnasty projects you come up with for this new toy!
@aerispalm65232 жыл бұрын
this episode made me so proud of my local makerspace's piece of shit circuit mill. It can do at least on par isolation width with way cheaper tools. sometimes you gotta kick it to make it work but then it works really nicely and has done so for at least a decade at this point.
@jannik98532 жыл бұрын
I fucking love your videos man, keep it up. I don't even care if the next one is about cheese production or w/e. I'll watch it. I don't know a single channel that has this level of production value as well as these punny jokes and memes. Love it
@JohnMazz2 жыл бұрын
Cool, look forward to seeing a big project with this in use!
@EgonSorensen2 жыл бұрын
Use the CNC to drill holes, route the board dimensions/outlines, etc. Use the UV resin printer to expose photo resist on the PCB, develop and etch as usual. (Locate the PCB on the resin printer with the locator holes BEFORE removing the resist protective layer - and put 'end-stops' in place so the PCB won't slide around when exposing the resist)
@DeltaGodWasTaken2 жыл бұрын
Man i have never realized i wanted this so bad until now
@xXxGANTZxXx2 жыл бұрын
The jokes in this episode are so good I feel like you got a writing staff. Awesome video man.
@CrowClouds2 жыл бұрын
This is a man who doesn't have a video game addiction
@1pcfred2 жыл бұрын
That's pretty sweet that they just gave you a CNC machine. I had to make my own. Being as copper clad board is conductive it's pretty easy material to map. You should probably find out what surface mapping is and how to do it. I stick PCB down with hot snot. It doesn't take much to hold it down really. If there's any pressure at that bit you know what happens to them. Snap!
@prototype79702 жыл бұрын
I like you how had the same problems that I did. I glad you show how hard it is to mill a pcb some some video make it look to easy and I feel like people may get trap by this. I am interested to try some of these very small end mill. Keep the cool Video comming !
@coverfrequency2305 Жыл бұрын
Fun trick, mount the board vertical and use a slitter blade. True you have to rotate the board around like a circus stunt but you get more feet per minute on the slitter blade. You can also bounce it back and forth between 2 opposing boards and send things flying. It tends to limit angles of traces until you get fed up and get a laser cutter to set the whole building on fire.
@ronnybergmann75692 жыл бұрын
I had the exact same experience with my CNC and the cheap 15 degree carving bits and I thought my CNC was trash :D Good to know that it can actually achieve decent results with the correct mill. If you need thighter tolerances for SMD parts you can also try to spray coat the pcb black and then laser the coat away and etch in acid. You can get around 0.05 mm clearance that way and it is also quite fast.
@SpasmFingers2 жыл бұрын
Well, I think I found my new favorite channel.
@benjaminpauza159 Жыл бұрын
you got my thumbs up with that little song in the middle.
@joshhuggins2 жыл бұрын
'Like a the dumpster behind a Whole Foods' hahahaha, that got me man! 😂😂😂 Great vid, thanks!
@VincentGroenewold2 жыл бұрын
Randomly popped up, loooooooove it! Gets me excited again to get into making. :)
@loganmancuso37912 жыл бұрын
These puns are why I can't stop watching your videos
@ESTEBANTMAN2 жыл бұрын
Your videos are pure gold
@ps3man85812 жыл бұрын
"Jackdaws Love My Big Sphinx Of Quartz" is amazing! I'm stealing that as my keyboard test phrase. I love your videos!
@hazonku2 жыл бұрын
Drone Jesus himself in the Patreon list! I sent that guy a banana! Great video, Zack! Love that the first thing you decided to do with a Snapmaker is a PCB. That's super cool!