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Can I borrow your bandsaw? (UK)
Don Pearce wrote:
On Sat, 14 Aug 2010 21:39:20 +0100, Ian wrote: keithr wrote: Ian Bell wrote: I have just received a prototype PCB that I need to cut accurately to size (double Eurocard). This is well beyond my poor hack sawing skills so I am hoping there is someone not to far from me (Holt, UK) who has a band saw or something similar that I can use. Help? Cheers Ian Score the board deeply on both sides with a sharp scriber, snap the board along the scribe line and neaten up with a file. Clamp a steel rule to the board as a guide when scoring and practice on a piece of scrap board first. The method is quick neat and accurate and requires no special skills, Thanks Keith. Several people have suggested this method so I am going to experiment on a piece of scrap and see how it goes. And when you snap it, lay the board on a table edge, aligned with the scoring. Apply more pressure to one end than the other and it will kind of tear along the line rather than snap. It will all be under much more control that way. d Thanks for the tip Don. Cheers Ian |
Can I borrow your bandsaw? (UK)
"Ian Bell" wrote in message ... I have just received a prototype PCB that I need to cut accurately to size (double Eurocard). This is well beyond my poor hack sawing skills so I am hoping there is someone not to far from me (Holt, UK) who has a band saw or something similar that I can use. Help? Cheers Ian Hi The term to use in a search is PCB milling. It's the internet and the very subject has been covered 49 million times. This is not the group to get solutions on almost anything! A search will bring you all the results you need. For amateur/occasional use the most popular tool is a Dremel which can be picked up on ebay for a tenner, or hired for day as a full table top mill for 6 quid. If bought on ebay you can then resell it after use or use it to cut kitchen tiles, or heart shaped holes in neighbours windows etc. I did a brief google on Dremel PCB milling and from first page of results am supplying these video links: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=61Q_6-cRua4&feature=fvw http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_jMeb...eature=related http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7x_oy...eature=related http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=urv6jArKp6M On YouTube there are thousands more clips on the subject of PCB milling. A Dremel is extremely versatile, apart from this subject they are pretty nifty with mobile phones, but thats another subject not ffor usenet. PS. PCB's can be layered, so scoring and snapping can result in cracking with some structures, milling is the safe option. |
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