A
Allan Adler
Guest
I was looking through Al Williams' TAB book on making your own printed
circuit boards this evening in a bookstore. One of its features is
a CD containing some free CAD software from SoftCad, which allegedly
runs under Windows and Linux. I don't know whether it would run on
my particular machine which has RedHat 7.1. I went to www.softcad.com
and tried to find a downloadable version of the software to look it over
and wasn't successful. There does seem to be a demo for download but, if
I understand the page correctly, it only works for one month. So now I'm
wondering whether the stuff on the CD is just the demo and will expire if
you don't purchase the real version.
Another thing I noticed in the book was the way Williams advises one to use
a laser printer. He says that you can print onto paper, as usual, or onto
transparency (possibly better), and then use an iron to transfer the
artwork to the copper clad board. According to Williams, the toner is
just a kind of plastic and it will melt if you apply an iron to it
and thereby transfer the artwork. He says one has to experiment to
get it right, since paper and printers and irons vary, and he advises
against using steam irons, even if the steam feature is turned off.
Has anyone here actually done this?
--
Ignorantly,
Allan Adler <ara@zurich.csail.mit.edu>
* Disclaimer: I am a guest and *not* a member of the MIT CSAIL. My actions and
* comments do not reflect in any way on MIT. Also, I am nowhere near Boston.
circuit boards this evening in a bookstore. One of its features is
a CD containing some free CAD software from SoftCad, which allegedly
runs under Windows and Linux. I don't know whether it would run on
my particular machine which has RedHat 7.1. I went to www.softcad.com
and tried to find a downloadable version of the software to look it over
and wasn't successful. There does seem to be a demo for download but, if
I understand the page correctly, it only works for one month. So now I'm
wondering whether the stuff on the CD is just the demo and will expire if
you don't purchase the real version.
Another thing I noticed in the book was the way Williams advises one to use
a laser printer. He says that you can print onto paper, as usual, or onto
transparency (possibly better), and then use an iron to transfer the
artwork to the copper clad board. According to Williams, the toner is
just a kind of plastic and it will melt if you apply an iron to it
and thereby transfer the artwork. He says one has to experiment to
get it right, since paper and printers and irons vary, and he advises
against using steam irons, even if the steam feature is turned off.
Has anyone here actually done this?
--
Ignorantly,
Allan Adler <ara@zurich.csail.mit.edu>
* Disclaimer: I am a guest and *not* a member of the MIT CSAIL. My actions and
* comments do not reflect in any way on MIT. Also, I am nowhere near Boston.