>> So far for all my home made boards I used PCB's ps output printed on >> laserjet on special paper which then I put on the board and use an >> iron to transfer the paint from the paper to the board. I used 2 >> different laser printers, an Infotec and a HP and with both I had 1:1. Of >> course this doesn't mean that PostScript is always 1:1 and I guess it >> depends on the printer and other things, but I think you should >> give it a try :) > > Can you share info on this special paper? I would like to try this. > > -Dave >
Someone sells special film for this purpose, and that costs much. I am not an expert, so I may be wrong on the mechanism, but I think the idea is that the laser printer doesn't use ink but some sort of polimer that is melted on the media. If the media is paper, some of the polimer paint works off in the paper. If you try your good old non-ball-point pen with normal paper, it 'drinks' the ink. However, if you use the special film, it has a shiny surface which won't 'drink' the ink or paint. The trick is not to buy that special film, but use some shiny paper with similar surface. This kind of paper is used for magazines and printed spam. It's usually thicker than normal paper. (I can't translate the name of the paper, my dictionary lacks this word.) I could buy some in a local decoration shop, in my experience most printers can handle ones between 100 and 130 gram/m^2. The critical part is when the printer tries to feed the paper and it slips. Someone reported that he was too lazy to buy such paper and used some spam or magazine. I haven't tested this, it may be an urban legend. I hope this helps; if my description was not useful enough, I could snail mail you a sample. Igor2 _______________________________________________ geda-user mailing list [email protected] http://www.seul.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/geda-user

