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- Path: sparky!uunet!portal!cup.portal.com!R_Tim_Coslet
- From: R_Tim_Coslet@cup.portal.com
- Newsgroups: sci.electronics
- Subject: Re: PC board etching question
- Message-ID: <72968@cup.portal.com>
- Date: Tue, 5 Jan 93 19:20:55 PST
- Organization: The Portal System (TM)
- References: <726223713.F00001@leotech.mv.com>
- <1993Jan5.162702.18205@organpipe.uug.arizona.edu>
- <C0EGEy.DHL@zoo.toronto.edu>
- Lines: 34
-
- >In article <1993Jan5.162702.18205@organpipe.uug.arizona.edu> dlatimer@iris4.ch
- e
- >m.arizona.edu (Darin Latimer) writes:
- >>Is it possible to do your own through hole plating? I have seen the
- >>press in rivet type vias but was warned away from them as they tend to
- >>form flaky connections. How is the through hole processing completed at a
- >>board house? ...
- >
- >They drill the holes, prepare the surfaces carefully, plate a very thin
- >layer of copper on chemically, and then thicken it with an electroplating
- >process. That's a one-sentence summary of a complex and tricky process.
- >It is not practical as a do-it-yourself exercise, not if you want reliable
- >results. Getting it to work dependably requires precise control of things
- >like temperature and solution chemistry, which means spending several
- >kilodollars on professional-grade equipment.
- >--
- >"God willing... we shall return." | Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology
- > -Gene Cernan, the Moon, Dec 1972 | henry@zoo.toronto.edu utzoo!henry
-
- Add to that that even the profesionals goof up plated thru holes occasionally,
- it really isn't anything a home experimenter wants to try to mess with.
-
- I remember almost 10 years ago when the company I work for had to scrap a
- whole batch of ASSEMBLED circuit boards because the plated thru hole's
- barrels were intermitently seperating from internal traces (these were 8
- layer boards). That PC vender was removed from the approved supplier list
- and investigated to determine the cause (it turned out to be that they wern't
- changing their drill bits frequently enough and the dull bits were making
- bad holes that wouldn't hold the plating reliably).
-
- R. Tim Coslet
-
- Usenet: R_Tim_Coslet@cup.portal.com
- technology, n. domesticated natural phenomena
-