Ha! I did the exact same thing. Only I molded a "dish" out of aluminum foil
and started etching my board in my bedroom. As my etching container started
to self destruct, I quickly opened my bedroom window and threw it outside. A
half second more and the whole thing would have melted and landed on the
carpet.

Kevin
N8IQ/4

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Dan Allen
Sent: Wednesday, January 04, 2006 9:30 PM
To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Subject: [Elecraft] Stupid? Top this!

When I was about 12 years old (1958/1959), printed circuit boards were
exotic technology that was unavailable in kits.

I wanted badly to handle one, and learn how they are made.

  A magazine (I believe it was Popular Electronics) ran an article on a 40
meter, transistorized QRP transmitter.  I took the schematic, and (to the
best of my abilities at that time) drew out a printed circuit board mask by
hand.

As there was no electronic supply stores in the area (South Carolina) at
that time, I saved up my pennies and ordered a blank printed circuit board
and an etching kit.  I realized that this was going to be a one-shot deal.
When the kit arrived, I carefully masked off the board with the included
black tape, and little black dots.  I then carried the board and etching kit
into the kitchen, showed my mother what I was doing, and asked her if she
had a shallow container that I could put the board in and then pour in the
etching solution.  She said that she had just the thing, and produced an
*aluminum* pie pan that she had saved from a Morton, frozen, cherry pie.
Yes, you see where this is going.  I put the circuit board in the pie pan,
poured in my bottle of etching solution, and was amazed to see the pie pan
erupt into a foaming, black mass.  I grabbed the edges of the pie pan, and
ran for the (stainless) kitchen sink.  Just (and I do mean just) as I got to
the sink, the bottom came out of the pie pan, and all of my etching solution
went quickly down the drain!

It's funny now, and it was probably funny at the time, but I don't believe I
thought so then!

The board sat around the ham shack for years, and I would look at it (with
all the acid resist tape still on it) from time to time.  It was kind of
like hitting yourself over the head, but without the pain.

The rest of the story?  I etched my *second* printed circuit board just a
few years ago, and (believe me) I used a glass container.  That worked
better!

Dan Allen
KB4ZVM
K-2 S/N 1757
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