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CNC PCB milling

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  • NeverDieN NeverDie

    An idea discusssed on Hackaday is to remove the UV filter on a personal pocket projector and then use the projector to project a solder mask image directly onto the solder mask of a PCB. If it can be made to work, this seems fairly elegant to me.

    I hadn't realized that personal pocket projectors had become so affordable. You can buy a new 1080p pocket projector on ebay for as little as $30-$50.

    A different Hackaday project uses Kapton tape cut by computer to somehow make a one-off solder mask for prototyping prototyping purposes.. Whatever works!

    JoeridemanJ Offline
    JoeridemanJ Offline
    Joerideman
    wrote on last edited by
    #866

    @NeverDie I just read back around 2017.

    Have you ever managed to get Andrews result? He claimed 6mil back then.

    NeverDieN 1 Reply Last reply
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    • JoeridemanJ Joerideman

      @NeverDie I just read back around 2017.

      Have you ever managed to get Andrews result? He claimed 6mil back then.

      NeverDieN Offline
      NeverDieN Offline
      NeverDie
      Hero Member
      wrote on last edited by
      #867

      @Joerideman said in CNC PCB milling:

      @NeverDie I just read back around 2017.

      Have you ever managed to get Andrews result? He claimed 6mil back then.

      Not consistently. That's why I'm doing a new round of improvements now. Somehow it's always the last little bit that consumes the largest share of the effort.

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • E Offline
        E Offline
        executivul
        wrote on last edited by
        #868

        @NeverDie my UV lamp is made from a UV led strip glued to a cardboard box, I just place the UV over the board not the board in the lamp.

        The so called 1080p cheap projectors are actually 640x480 real resolution, or even 320x240, they are able to accept a 1080p signal and scale it down so are falsely advertised as FullHD. That was the state of things a year ago when I last checked. Much better to get a sh brand projector instead.
        About resolution: FullHD 1920x1080 over a 150x100mm board gets you 10pixels/mm roughly, that is 0.1mm resolution, I don't know if that is good enough, also focusing at such a close range would require some lens hacking, from the factory they focus at 50cm at least and get you a 60-100cm diagonal size.

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • NeverDieN NeverDie

          @NeverDie said in CNC PCB milling:

          You probably want to aim for a thickness above the copper of about 0.5mm

          Correction: I should have said 0.5 mils.

          That's according to altium: https://resources.altium.com/p/how-choose-correct-solder-mask-your-pcb#:~:text=The typical solder mask thickness,solder mask over your traces.

          However, I'm not sure if they're referring to wet film thickness or dry film thickness. I guess with uv cured paint it maybe would be the same either way?

          NeverDieN Offline
          NeverDieN Offline
          NeverDie
          Hero Member
          wrote on last edited by NeverDie
          #869

          @NeverDie said in CNC PCB milling:

          @NeverDie said in CNC PCB milling:

          You probably want to aim for a thickness above the copper of about 0.5mm

          Correction: I should have said 0.5 mils.

          That's according to altium: https://resources.altium.com/p/how-choose-correct-solder-mask-your-pcb#:~:text=The typical solder mask thickness,solder mask over your traces.

          However, I'm not sure if they're referring to wet film thickness or dry film thickness. I guess with uv cured paint it maybe would be the same either way?

          I found that certain brands of Kapton tape are advertised to be 0.5 mils thick: https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B00EP254UU/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

          I've ordered some and will try using that to set the film thickness of the solder mask when I flatten it out between two very flat 1/2" thick panes of glass.

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          • NeverDieN Offline
            NeverDieN Offline
            NeverDie
            Hero Member
            wrote on last edited by
            #870

            For purposes of solder masking, I compared a number of black markers for drawing on PP sheeting to see which would be the blackest and most opaque. I compared: Inkzall, regular Sharpie, Sharpie Oil, and POSCA (a Japanese paint pen). By reputation I had thought the POSCA would win, but by far the blackest and most opaque of the bunch was the Sharpie Oil. It appeared to be genuinely opaque. The Inkzall and the regular sharpie were not opaque at all.

            NeverDieN 1 Reply Last reply
            1
            • NeverDieN NeverDie

              For purposes of solder masking, I compared a number of black markers for drawing on PP sheeting to see which would be the blackest and most opaque. I compared: Inkzall, regular Sharpie, Sharpie Oil, and POSCA (a Japanese paint pen). By reputation I had thought the POSCA would win, but by far the blackest and most opaque of the bunch was the Sharpie Oil. It appeared to be genuinely opaque. The Inkzall and the regular sharpie were not opaque at all.

              NeverDieN Offline
              NeverDieN Offline
              NeverDie
              Hero Member
              wrote on last edited by NeverDie
              #871

              Reporting back: After letting it dry overnight, I discovered that the Sharpie-Oil apparently shrinks and then flakes off of the PP film:
              p0.JPG

              Not sure if it behaves better with other films or not.

              However, before it dries, it performs great, as seen below.

              Here I am squishing solder mask between two thick sheets of glass:
              p1.JPG
              This technique seems to do a reasonably good job of producing a uniform thickness of the UV solder mask.

              Here I use a Sharpie Oil marker to print the word OIL and place it over the flattened solder mask before exposure to UV:
              p2.JPG

              I exposed it to UV for a full 99 seconds, which may have completely cured the non-masked solder-mask. Here is how it looks after I removed the "OIL" mask:
              p3.JPG

              Here is how it looks after peeling back the top layer of PP film:
              p4.JPG

              I then removed the uncured solder mask using IPA, after which I cured it some more under UV just to be sure:
              p5.JPG

              As a first attempt, not bad! Using a high opacity mask probably helped quite a bit.

              So, I guess now the question is: which inkjet ink/pigment or which laserjet toner has the highest opacity? For instance, there is this which claims to be: https://www.amazon.com/Ink-Dynasty-Resistant-Refillable-cartridge/dp/B00E3PAUXA
              or this:
              https://www.screenerschoice.com/index.php?route=product/product&product_id=157

              From the looks of it, the answer will be some kind of inkjet black pigment, which is consistent with the results I got from comparing ink pens vs paint pens above.

              JoeridemanJ 1 Reply Last reply
              1
              • NeverDieN NeverDie

                Reporting back: After letting it dry overnight, I discovered that the Sharpie-Oil apparently shrinks and then flakes off of the PP film:
                p0.JPG

                Not sure if it behaves better with other films or not.

                However, before it dries, it performs great, as seen below.

                Here I am squishing solder mask between two thick sheets of glass:
                p1.JPG
                This technique seems to do a reasonably good job of producing a uniform thickness of the UV solder mask.

                Here I use a Sharpie Oil marker to print the word OIL and place it over the flattened solder mask before exposure to UV:
                p2.JPG

                I exposed it to UV for a full 99 seconds, which may have completely cured the non-masked solder-mask. Here is how it looks after I removed the "OIL" mask:
                p3.JPG

                Here is how it looks after peeling back the top layer of PP film:
                p4.JPG

                I then removed the uncured solder mask using IPA, after which I cured it some more under UV just to be sure:
                p5.JPG

                As a first attempt, not bad! Using a high opacity mask probably helped quite a bit.

                So, I guess now the question is: which inkjet ink/pigment or which laserjet toner has the highest opacity? For instance, there is this which claims to be: https://www.amazon.com/Ink-Dynasty-Resistant-Refillable-cartridge/dp/B00E3PAUXA
                or this:
                https://www.screenerschoice.com/index.php?route=product/product&product_id=157

                From the looks of it, the answer will be some kind of inkjet black pigment, which is consistent with the results I got from comparing ink pens vs paint pens above.

                JoeridemanJ Offline
                JoeridemanJ Offline
                Joerideman
                wrote on last edited by
                #872

                @NeverDie I saw an YouTube video screenprinting. That guy noticed that semi transparent sheets work better than transparent sheets. Ink holds better or something.

                I can actually try this one out. Because afteral. We want that 0.4mm pitch right?

                I just need to find something to put the paint on.

                NeverDieN 1 Reply Last reply
                1
                • Z Offline
                  Z Offline
                  ZhangCan
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #873

                  Thank you very much.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • JoeridemanJ Joerideman

                    @NeverDie I saw an YouTube video screenprinting. That guy noticed that semi transparent sheets work better than transparent sheets. Ink holds better or something.

                    I can actually try this one out. Because afteral. We want that 0.4mm pitch right?

                    I just need to find something to put the paint on.

                    NeverDieN Offline
                    NeverDieN Offline
                    NeverDie
                    Hero Member
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #874

                    @Joerideman said in CNC PCB milling:

                    @NeverDie I saw an YouTube video screenprinting. That guy noticed that semi transparent sheets work better than transparent sheets. Ink holds better or something.

                    I can actually try this one out. Because afteral. We want that 0.4mm pitch right?

                    I just need to find something to put the paint on.

                    Which thing are you planning to try? Sharpie-Oil on a semi-transparent sheet, or the uv resistant inkjet ink, or...?

                    For enhanced laser printing I found this: https://ikonartstencil.com/toner-enhancement-spray/
                    though I have no idea how well, or even if, it works.

                    JoeridemanJ 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • NeverDieN Offline
                      NeverDieN Offline
                      NeverDie
                      Hero Member
                      wrote on last edited by NeverDie
                      #875

                      I received some Sharpie-Oil "Extra Fine" pens. Testing them, they have a 1mm line width, so they'd be no good for filling in features smaller than that. AFAIK, they have the smallest tips in the Sharpie-Oil series.

                      I received the 16-bit closed-loop uStepper hardware from Denmark, so I'll be testing that sometime soon. I intend to use it on the z-axis, since accuracy on depth of cut is critical. If even this is still not enough, then I'll work harder to identify the source of the error and, if appropriate, consider stronger measures like low run-out collets, low-runout bits, ball-screws, tighter linear rails and/or tracking absolute position with a DRO and/or possibly a different spindle.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • NeverDieN NeverDie

                        @Joerideman said in CNC PCB milling:

                        @NeverDie I saw an YouTube video screenprinting. That guy noticed that semi transparent sheets work better than transparent sheets. Ink holds better or something.

                        I can actually try this one out. Because afteral. We want that 0.4mm pitch right?

                        I just need to find something to put the paint on.

                        Which thing are you planning to try? Sharpie-Oil on a semi-transparent sheet, or the uv resistant inkjet ink, or...?

                        For enhanced laser printing I found this: https://ikonartstencil.com/toner-enhancement-spray/
                        though I have no idea how well, or even if, it works.

                        JoeridemanJ Offline
                        JoeridemanJ Offline
                        Joerideman
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #876

                        @NeverDie inkjet printing on semi transparent sheets.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        1
                        • NeverDieN Offline
                          NeverDieN Offline
                          NeverDie
                          Hero Member
                          wrote on last edited by NeverDie
                          #877

                          I've played around with the Ustepper-S now, and as near as I can tell, it is working correctly in closed-loop mode without issue. After the execution of each command, it shows error of 0.00, and it maintains closed loop operation to maintain its position even after the execution of the command, as it should. In my testing, Servo42A fails to do that, as well as having other problems, including lack of response to posted github issues.

                          Ustepper-S incorporates PID, so it should be able to do rapids and yet stop exactly where it should. Again, my initial impression is that seems to be the case.

                          I'm ordering UStepper-S for the x and y axis as well, which unfortunately will again take weeks to receive. However, I expect this will be the last stepper driver upgrade that I will ever need to do. If I later decide to upgrade to NEMA-23, the same UStepper-S can be used to drive it and only a different bracket would be needed to position it on the back of the NEMA-23.

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                          0
                          • NeverDieN Offline
                            NeverDieN Offline
                            NeverDie
                            Hero Member
                            wrote on last edited by NeverDie
                            #878

                            I found a good "once and done" lubricant for my CNC called Krytox. It's made by Dupont, is non-toxic, never dries out, and is non-reactive with just about everything. It is more or less liquid teflon (PTFE). It comes in a wide spectrum of different viscosities. I'm using GPL105, but I think for a CNC one could argue for using a version that's a least slightly more viscous (i.e. GPL106 or higher).

                            There also exists grease versions of Krytox, so perhaps (?) that would be even better. In general, for any given lubricant, how does one decide what the right viscosity is to use?

                            NeverDieN 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • M mlei30

                              @andrew Have you got your new 3020T yet? I intend to buy 3020 but there are a few variants in Aliexpress. Which site did you buy from? Can you share the link? Thank you for starting this thread.

                              andrewA Offline
                              andrewA Offline
                              andrew
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #879

                              @mlei30 This was my choice:
                              https://www.ebay.com/itm/CNC-Router-3020T-3-AXIS-USB-Graviermaschine-GraviergeräT-FräSmaschine/313030564524
                              It already arrived and I started to play with it.
                              I decided not use its Chinese controller software or Mach3 with parallel port connection, so it needs some upgrade before I can make the first tests with it.
                              There are tons of upgrade options to make it work with open source stuff. I almost ordered a TinyGv2 controller, but it turned out, that that CNC can be GRBL controlled over the parallel port. In such case,
                              original stepper and spindle drivers can be used as well.

                              The problem is, that the research I found behind this was misleading and it contains inaccurate / improper details (or at least not exactly applicable to my HW version), so I had to re-execute the reverse engineering.

                              I'm about to finish it. At the moment I can control everything on the CNC from GRBL. Now I need to calibrate it and make the solution "solid/proper". I have hard time finding free time for this, but I hope that first test runs will be done soon.

                              I'll be back with the results soon (and I'm also planning to write a blogpost on the details later).

                              NeverDieN N 2 Replies Last reply
                              0
                              • andrewA andrew

                                @mlei30 This was my choice:
                                https://www.ebay.com/itm/CNC-Router-3020T-3-AXIS-USB-Graviermaschine-GraviergeräT-FräSmaschine/313030564524
                                It already arrived and I started to play with it.
                                I decided not use its Chinese controller software or Mach3 with parallel port connection, so it needs some upgrade before I can make the first tests with it.
                                There are tons of upgrade options to make it work with open source stuff. I almost ordered a TinyGv2 controller, but it turned out, that that CNC can be GRBL controlled over the parallel port. In such case,
                                original stepper and spindle drivers can be used as well.

                                The problem is, that the research I found behind this was misleading and it contains inaccurate / improper details (or at least not exactly applicable to my HW version), so I had to re-execute the reverse engineering.

                                I'm about to finish it. At the moment I can control everything on the CNC from GRBL. Now I need to calibrate it and make the solution "solid/proper". I have hard time finding free time for this, but I hope that first test runs will be done soon.

                                I'll be back with the results soon (and I'm also planning to write a blogpost on the details later).

                                NeverDieN Offline
                                NeverDieN Offline
                                NeverDie
                                Hero Member
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #880

                                @andrew Looks as though your new nema steppers either have encoders or else those are knobs for manually jogging. Aside from that, it looks generally stiffer due to all metal with no plastic.

                                andrewA 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • andrewA andrew

                                  @mlei30 This was my choice:
                                  https://www.ebay.com/itm/CNC-Router-3020T-3-AXIS-USB-Graviermaschine-GraviergeräT-FräSmaschine/313030564524
                                  It already arrived and I started to play with it.
                                  I decided not use its Chinese controller software or Mach3 with parallel port connection, so it needs some upgrade before I can make the first tests with it.
                                  There are tons of upgrade options to make it work with open source stuff. I almost ordered a TinyGv2 controller, but it turned out, that that CNC can be GRBL controlled over the parallel port. In such case,
                                  original stepper and spindle drivers can be used as well.

                                  The problem is, that the research I found behind this was misleading and it contains inaccurate / improper details (or at least not exactly applicable to my HW version), so I had to re-execute the reverse engineering.

                                  I'm about to finish it. At the moment I can control everything on the CNC from GRBL. Now I need to calibrate it and make the solution "solid/proper". I have hard time finding free time for this, but I hope that first test runs will be done soon.

                                  I'll be back with the results soon (and I'm also planning to write a blogpost on the details later).

                                  N Offline
                                  N Offline
                                  niallain
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #881

                                  @andrew

                                  • Does it use ball screws or trapezoidal ones?
                                  • how stiff it is in X an Y directions?
                                    (on my machine slight push on spindle, yields ~0.2mm of flex, and heavier one around 0.5mm, which is roughly precision I get when cutting plastic. For PCB routing error seems to stay within 0.2mm boundary)
                                  • how big is backlash
                                  • screw (movement) linearity in X,Y planes
                                  andrewA 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • NeverDieN NeverDie

                                    @andrew Looks as though your new nema steppers either have encoders or else those are knobs for manually jogging. Aside from that, it looks generally stiffer due to all metal with no plastic.

                                    andrewA Offline
                                    andrewA Offline
                                    andrew
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #882

                                    @NeverDie it is a knob for manual positioning. the whole assembly and machine is very massive and stable, all metal parts do matter a lot.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • N niallain

                                      @andrew

                                      • Does it use ball screws or trapezoidal ones?
                                      • how stiff it is in X an Y directions?
                                        (on my machine slight push on spindle, yields ~0.2mm of flex, and heavier one around 0.5mm, which is roughly precision I get when cutting plastic. For PCB routing error seems to stay within 0.2mm boundary)
                                      • how big is backlash
                                      • screw (movement) linearity in X,Y planes
                                      andrewA Offline
                                      andrewA Offline
                                      andrew
                                      wrote on last edited by andrew
                                      #883

                                      @niallain it is 3020T which uses trapezoidal screws. "Z" uses ball screws.
                                      you can check the "official" technical details on the item's specification (scroll down to the description then click on the "specification"):

                                      ...
                                      Driving units X axis: 1204 trapezoidal screws
                                      Driving units Y axis: 1204 trapezoidal screws
                                      Driving units Z axis: 1204 trapezoidal screws
                                      ...
                                      Repeat accuracy: 0.05mm
                                      ...
                                      Spindle precision: radial beat acuities 0.03 mm
                                      ...

                                      Note that none of these parameters above are confirmed. To be honest I don't have the right measurement tools for that, but the fine trace PCB samples will prove it, or not :)

                                      N 1 Reply Last reply
                                      1
                                      • andrewA andrew

                                        @niallain it is 3020T which uses trapezoidal screws. "Z" uses ball screws.
                                        you can check the "official" technical details on the item's specification (scroll down to the description then click on the "specification"):

                                        ...
                                        Driving units X axis: 1204 trapezoidal screws
                                        Driving units Y axis: 1204 trapezoidal screws
                                        Driving units Z axis: 1204 trapezoidal screws
                                        ...
                                        Repeat accuracy: 0.05mm
                                        ...
                                        Spindle precision: radial beat acuities 0.03 mm
                                        ...

                                        Note that none of these parameters above are confirmed. To be honest I don't have the right measurement tools for that, but the fine trace PCB samples will prove it, or not :)

                                        N Offline
                                        N Offline
                                        niallain
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #884

                                        @andrew

                                        @andrew said in CNC PCB milling:

                                        @niallain it is 3020T which uses trapezoidal screws. "Z" uses ball screws.
                                        you can check the "official" technical details on the item's specification (scroll down to the description then click on the "specification"):

                                        declared specs for mine were in the same ballpark as your's 3020T, modulo 8mm trapezoidal screw. But in reality that wasn't true at all, in my case cuplrit of the biggest error is the flex from the way screw nuts are attached to carriage, and the second/third are nonlinear screws (+-0.060mm) and backlash.

                                        I'm ordered a 1204 ball screw kit for Y axis, to test how much it would reduce error.

                                        PS:
                                        As for testing, I just used regular digital calliper with 0.01mm resolution.

                                        NeverDieN 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • N niallain

                                          @andrew

                                          @andrew said in CNC PCB milling:

                                          @niallain it is 3020T which uses trapezoidal screws. "Z" uses ball screws.
                                          you can check the "official" technical details on the item's specification (scroll down to the description then click on the "specification"):

                                          declared specs for mine were in the same ballpark as your's 3020T, modulo 8mm trapezoidal screw. But in reality that wasn't true at all, in my case cuplrit of the biggest error is the flex from the way screw nuts are attached to carriage, and the second/third are nonlinear screws (+-0.060mm) and backlash.

                                          I'm ordered a 1204 ball screw kit for Y axis, to test how much it would reduce error.

                                          PS:
                                          As for testing, I just used regular digital calliper with 0.01mm resolution.

                                          NeverDieN Offline
                                          NeverDieN Offline
                                          NeverDie
                                          Hero Member
                                          wrote on last edited by NeverDie
                                          #885

                                          @niallain said in CNC PCB milling:

                                          in my case cuplrit of the biggest error is the flex from the way screw nuts are attached to carriage, and the second/third are nonlinear screws (+-0.060mm) and backlash.

                                          I'm curious to know how is it that you're measuring those things? I'd like to quantify as many sources of error as possible, but I'm not sure how to go about it.

                                          E N 2 Replies Last reply
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