RE: [Vo]:Liquid Glass

2010-02-09 Thread Jones Beene
Ron, You have to wonder - with liquid glass and a commercial laser engraver (etcher) which is similar to an ink jet printer - http://www.epiloglaser.com/product_line.htm and some imagination and metal-coated film, if one could not etch the circuits with the printer, then coat this film with the

RE: [Vo]:Liquid Glass

2010-02-09 Thread Ron Wormus
Jones, That would be an interesting project. More than one layer would be needed though I don't know how accurately you could align the sheet for multiple passes. I think we will see some of the commercial panels drop in price. In our local paper just this last week was an article on leasing

RE: [Vo]:Liquid Glass

2010-02-09 Thread Jones Beene
-Original Message- From: Ron Wormus What I really need is a heater! It's been an unusually cold winter on the CO front range this year my gas bills crazy high just to keep this old place around 60 degrees. You should never have given up on those fractional hydrogen gas-discharge

Re: [Vo]:Liquid Glass

2010-02-09 Thread Horace Heffner
Jones, Thanks for posting that reference! Cool! Actual desktop USB interface computer laser cutters. And they sell used ones on occasion too. That stuff reminds me of the liquid sodium silicate I used to play with as a kid. It was sold under the name Eisenglass I think. It came as a

RE: [Vo]:Liquid Glass

2010-02-09 Thread Jones Beene
-Original Message- From: Horace Heffner I am curious as to why you think circuits have to be etched? To use silicon for a solar cell I think it has to be doped, so as to create a PN boundary. It is the potential drop across the PN boundary that actually drives a solar cell. The sun

[Vo]:Liquid Glass

2010-02-08 Thread Ron Wormus
This sounds very cool. http://www.physorg.com/news184310039.html Ron