DIY home-made SMT metal stencil - the definitive tutorial
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- Опубликовано: 10 фев 2013
- Writeup and details at: lowpowerlab.com/blog/2013/02/1...
This is a walk-through for making cheap high quality SMD metal stencils at home, using commonly available materials. Наука
Amazing. The acid part was the most amazing part. I never thought that it would eat through the metal like that, and do it so perfectly. I am blown away by that. First thing I am going to do is go back and watch this video a few more times. Subscribed.
*Watched this again today after talking to chatgpt about photo emulsion solder stencil making. This video is great. Among the best electronics tutorials on this platform. Thanks again!*
Excellent job Felix, in so many levels, very entrepreneurial and ingenious. Wish you continued success.
Excellent idea, everything needed is explained in short. Quality video and narration. Not even a second wasted. Thanks for sharing!!.
I have watched two videos from you and I loved them. They are very clever and helpful.
THANK YOU FOR SHARING!!!
Very VERY cool technique! I never would have thought it would be this easy to make DIY stencils!
Great, glad it worked out!
It take patience and perseverence, but when it works it feels so cool to make your own HI-Q stencils
Thanks for this. It took me two attempts, but the second attempt came out perfect. However I used laminated dry resist film, not vinyl. Lessons learned: use 0000 wire wool to sand off the resin from the coke can, acetone didn't work well for me. Be careful when sanding, as kinking the metal creates a crease that you can never get out and makes the stencil useless. Make sure metal is complely dry before laminating on the photoresist film (one website recommends having it wet, but the water turns to steam in the laminator and makes bubbles). Pause at regular intervals during etching to check under magnification, you don't want to over-etch.
THANK YOU for posting this FANTASTIC video! I have been searching for an inexpensive way to make SMT stencils, and this is by far the best method i found yet. Thank you! :)
OMG impressive job!! That looks amazing, will try it at home for sure
Really a very nice technique !
I just made my first stencil and the quality is really on top !
For information, having no vinyl, I did with a standard sheet of paper, the result is really good too.
Thanks again !
From a laser printer? Did you have to stop the print before the laser printer does the heat roller to solidify the toner?
YES! Etching is the way to go for stencils, even for very fine pitches - it will do the job. Nice video, Thanks!
Awesome idea! I frequently thought about doing something similar, but never thought about using an aluminum can!
Very cool - this is the other half of my puzzle for homebrew PCBs. Thank you Felix.
Excellent! I will be trying this next week, thank you very much.
Very well filmed narrated and interesting video keep up the good work
Outstanding! I'm going to have to give this a shot.
Very impressive. Thanks for sharing your technique.
This is such a good idea. Thank you for this.
love your toner transfer method
On a serious note, what's the best way to safely dispose of the aluminum acetate type stuff left over?
After unsuccessfully looking for a can with easily removable paint I found one in Asian food store. Thailand-made fruit juice comes in a bare can covered in plastic film like heatshrink. No chemicals necessary, just peel off the label :-). The inside is still in place but this is going to be a "back side" anyway.
Juice is pretty good, too, and price is like US$1 per 500 ml can. Highly recommended.
That's ingenious.
With a fine tipped applicator and good solder paste stencils aren't needed really.
Jake Heuft you don't order/build a stencil to solder a single prototype. But I just produced a small batch of my current project and it was really helpful! Everything else is pretty time consuming.
I used it, good effect and useful
Michael Fitzmayer That's what job shops are for. Entrepreneurs or inventors can not utilize this. If you start to hit the boundary where this is useful to you, you need to abstract the business and find specialization.
Either someone that has these skills or a third party.
very well explained and nicely executed thanks for sharing, subscribed.
Awesome video. Great idea! I can't wait to try this.
Most often than not I now shrink by 8.5mil on all sides, even on some of the smallest pads (0.5mm pitch). This gives the best results when applying the paste and also best looking SMT stencil.
Great vid, thanks!
Dayumn Son!!!!!!! Samy Kamkar commented on this video!!! It means this method surely works. Going to try it right away without giving a second thought!! Cool video! and you are the coolest person Samy Kamkar!!!
Great idea, hope to test it soon.
Neat idea. Ive been collecting information to try smd. Ill give this a try when I'm ready. Still trying to decide on how to convert a toaster oven. Seems to be so many ways.
Yes, awesome! Thanks for this tutorial!!!
thank you very much .. perfect description and small useful video
Great info. Thank you VERY much for such a great presentation.
Alright. I'll try it this weekend. Thank you for the quick help!
Did your stencil work?
pure awesome, gonna try this out!
Thank you very much. I really loved this tutorial
so simple why am I not already using this method. Thanks for sharing.
Success finally! Your mixture ratio of 1 part acid, 3 parts peroxide is right, the problem was I had 10% muriatic acid (cheap cleaning brand and I noticed all other brands where around 25%). So I guess my mixture was about 1 part acid 6 parts peroxide before. I would have thought that with more acid the reaction would be greater but it's not so, this time with a 1:3 ratio it was much slower but it etched really evenly, the stencil looks great. Now to try with solder paste.
Thanks for the info!
very good and simple tutorial.
This limits the amount of solder paste that will be applied to the pad, and gives tolerance in board/stencil offset. It will also account for undercutting of the toner mask when etching.
Using 7.5mil probably came from experience.
Sometimes I just shrink in one dimension only (solder paste will reflow but what you really want is LESS solder paste). Sometimes after shrinking everything by a fixed amount I produce the PNG and then use the eraser to make the pads shorter on very small packages or on uUSB connectors. That's because too much solder paste will cause bridges. It's a lot of trial and error but after a while you start to get the feel of how much and which way to shrink pads.
By the way, the smallest parts where MSOP-10's and there are a couple of 20 pin and 24 pin QFN's, really small footprints that came out looking really good.
Nice trick, I appreciate your work.
Saw now. Nicely done. Thanks!
Nice video. Can't wait to try this as stencil's are generally expensive.
I would try a slower reaction, mine takes about 10-12min, feels just right, not to slow, not too violently fast. The solution is 1 part acid, 3 parts peroxide, but still using the same ORIGINAL mix since January this year. I kept adding a little copper wire when it got dull and that rejuvenated it right up.
VERY well done. Great ideas, well presented - Thanks!
I love this video! brilliant idea and very well executed. I plan on using a laser cutter to just make the stencil without the toner. Do you know if this type of aluminum is safe for laser cutters?
I tried this out today and it worked quite well. I think I over immersed at the first attempt and the solution ate most of the board. The second attempt was quite a success.The only difference is I did not have access to the vinyl paper and I used photopaper instead. Yes it took sometime to scrub it off after applying it to the metal. Also the coating inside the can did not come off with Acetone. Hence I had to scrub it with a kitchen scrubber. Thankfully the toner did stick to the metal though. Any ideas on how I can safely dispose the etching solution?
you're a genius!! INGREDIBLE!! incredible, I have to do it myself!
Amazing! You have inspired me...
Hi. Thi is very useful video indeed. The idea itself is brilliant. Thanks for sharing.
I can not catch this moment - clear tape is covered on the whole space excluding black zone? But what about back side of pads - it must be covered also?
I tried leaving the outside paint on. That will obstruct the pads when they etch through risking to overetch if you cannot estimate how much they etched. So I prefer to give the outside a good wipe to at least have a clear idea how well the pads are etched.
I also tried removing the epoxy layer with a pin, its way too time consuming and way too inaccurate. A laser cutter may be used to etch the epoxy but I haven't tried that - but the metal sheet has to be very flat, a bit hard with can metal
You are a complete pro. Thanks for showing us noobs how it's done.
Your city/county should have a hazardous materials center or day when they collect stuff like that. FWIW ... I'm still on the first batch of acid solution for etching stencils, I never had to throw it away, still works just as fast, just added a bit of acid and peroxide on two occasions.
Awesome, thank you very much. I will give it a try.
To give you enough buffer when you etch. Also you want the etched holes smaller than the actual pads to avoid too much solder reflow and excess flux residue.
Can I make .4mm diameter stencil with 0.8mm spacing between the disk centres with this method? For ddr3-2 sodimm type
@@brad8122 I am guessing you could but you have to make a very good transfer, and then be very careful with the etching.
However at how cheap stencils are these days I would not try that, at this point in time it's not worth the hassle and mess. Unless you want to experiment. Still back then in 2013 it was an attractive option for cheap (and quick!) stencils at home with very usable fine pitch.
Absolutely brilliant.
Toaster ovens are cheap, but you can try the skillet method from Sparkfun, I haven't but lots of people say that works well. With the toaster I can bake more boards at 1 time.
It was like +20steps to print the top paste layer.
Recommend to go with DipTrace,
only 3steps: select export, set any shrink, preview and then print.
this is really cool man!
Thanks, and yes your guess was pretty much very close
Depends what thickness and if it creases easy. The can aluminum is perfect due to its properties.
I laser etch stencils today, much easier and less effort, see my video on that.
What other etching solution can we use.
@@Shanoo5142
Muriatic Acid is just a common name for Hydrochloric Acid. HCl is usually sold for adjusting the PH balance of swimming pools, or for cleaning concrete. It is also the first ingredient used in many many chemicals made in a chemistry lab. It's probably the most common acid available commercially around the world.
One other enchant combo I've seen someone mention, and saved, but haven't tried myself is as follows:
150ml hydrogen peroxide
20g "lemon acid" (available in supermarket)
5g salt
That's exactly what was described in a comment on another channel that I came across and took a screenshot of, but again, I haven't actually tried it. That receipe was intended for etching circuit boards but so is the Hydrocloric Acid and Hydrogen Peroxide shown here, (which is what I currently use to etch my boards too).
-Jake
Thank you for the great video, Felix.
Happy New Year 2016.
very nice procedure!
Great, I will try this soon.
genio...!.. muy bueno..! gracias por compartirlo..
So, how do you prepare the vinyl? Is it just regular contact paper? Does the vinyl affect the printer somehow - does it mess it up?
This transfer method seems much better than the paper method. Can I use transparencies as an alternative?
Thanks Felix. One more question. What makes the reaction faster? More acid or more peroxide? I made the first test but about halfway through I started to loose the edges of the pads, some disappeared before the etching could go all the way through.
This took about 4 minutes so I was thinking maybe a faster reacting solution might help?
The real solution would be to use toner on both sides but I dont think I would be able to align them!
Would you try a faster reaction or slower reaction?
Very Well!!!
Me funcionó
Very nice ! I need to try this out. Thank you :-)
Also, the iron is set to the hottest position (I wait till its heated up and then place it on top of the sticky note stack for ~30secs, then apply pressure and movement gently not to jerk the vinyl underneath ... then rapidly put the stencil in cold water. Then the paper/vinyl should come off easily revealing a perfect transfer.
Thank you
Could you write the requirements (with link) in description ?
Thank you Felix. Worked perfectly. I just bought a Cameo 3 Silhouette. I'm quite sure it will cut out the freaking stencil. This RUclips is 2013... we are in 2017. any tough? please? with cherry on top.
Is it possible to use Peroxide with some other acids? For example with citric acid? Maybe in pair with NaCl table salt...
I lost it at the final step. That board you show on 5:20 is the same cutted piece of aluminium you used in the beggining?....or this was just the stencil for the electronics? (processor and stuff)
Great method! Thanks!
You do not have to use peroxide cos aluminium is quite reactive and alcl3 is pretty soluble. Also you can use naoh instead of acid.
Great video. Subscribed.
how do you make sure that when you print it , it is the right size.(true size)
Hey Felix - I'm having a lot of trouble removing the epoxy and paint from the outside of the can. I even tried used a hot-air gun set at the highest temperature to try to break the bonds between the paint and the aluminum, but to no avail. I was able to get some of the paint off but hardly any of the epoxy, and that was with a good hour to an hour and a half of elbow greases. Any suggestions?
great job but what did u use for etching?
Acetone will dissolve epoxy, get some from HomeDepot. Rubbing with a paper towel you should start seeing the metail within 1 minute or less. Some cans are harder, so try a different type of can. I found the heating does work in some cases and makes the epoxy easier to remove. I wouldn't worry about the paint so much. Just get the epoxy off without scratching the metal so you can transfer the toner. Keep trying, it will work, I've made many many stencils with this method.
Can I use ferric chloride for etching?
So really I just need to focus on getting the interior epoxy off? I will try a different soda can. I was using Home Depot acetone though.
Hello Felix. Could you explain a bit more why you shrinked the pads? I'm ready to try your method but I'm using very small pitch IC's and when I shrink the pads 0.0075 some almost disappear. Is this required? Is there a way to calculate this maybe by percentage?
Thanks!
Mine is 1200 I think and I see no real difference between printing at 600 or 1200dpi. Make sure it's a laser printer and it's got plenty of toner. Also use the darkest toner setting available in windows.
Great video!
Hi Felix, I bought a vinyl like the one of the video (I think) but transparent, the thing is that, when I print the circuit the some tiny bubbles appear on the vinyl, I think because of the heat of the laser printer, do you know if this is normal, or maybe my vinil is too thin?, I used this print to test the transfer to the aluminum but it faild to transfer the print correctly, I would post a photo but youtube doesnt have the option.
Thanks for your reply. I tried using 600dpi for 0.1mm pitch and it was not clean enough and real 1200dpi printers are hard to find, that's why I asked.
so this is photo etch? This I understand. I also understand soldering circuit boards. What I don't get is - in this application, what are you doing with the end product? Do you have pre-made files?
Great video
3:33 What "cheap shelving vinyl" are you using?
I make stencils from clear plastic overhead-projector film, then cnc machine the holes with a 0.5mm or 0.7mm endmill.
They are quicker to make and no issues of scaling like with a laser printer.
And the clear stencil is great because you can see through it for pcb alignment. 🤓
Excellent work. :D
thanks. can you upload software link??
I have tried a half dozen times using ferric chloride on copper, aluminum and brass... and have not made a single stencil yet. it starts to work but I have not had it go all the way though, I have even left it in the solution for hours in direct sunlight for heat and all it did was bubble off the mask leaving a mess.
Help with what?
What kind of acid is this? Is the 1 part of muriatic acid and 3 parts of peroxide?
Hi. what is the name of the alcohol removing the metal sheet.
Oh right, one last tip: check the developed film under magnification just before etching. Defects (pinholes) in the film seem to be common, but can be filled in using a CD marker pen.