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ikalogic said:it all depends whether you'r gonna produce you'r PCB's at home or not?
Hero999 said:Two traces between IC pads, the most I'd normally dare is 1 whatever method I'm using for artwork transfer!
Nigel Goodwin said:I agree - I would consider putting even one between IC pads as poor practice, and two as bordering on criminal practice! - the thought of three makes me want hanging bringing back!![]()
3v0 said:Poor practice ? Why?
Most commercial PCB's are double-sided, but most hobbyists who make their own PCB's avoid double-sided layouts unless absolutely necessary.Nigel Goodwin said:It's making everything "closer to it's limits", with more chance of failures and problems - and mostly just down to poor or lazy design!. Check PCB's in commercial products, it's fairly rare to find traces between IC pads - reliability is improved by not doing it, particularly in a flow soldered situation - and I imagine lead free solder only makes matters worse?.
evandude said:Most commercial PCB's are double-sided, but most hobbyists who make their own PCB's avoid double-sided layouts unless absolutely necessary.
Check PCB's in commercial products
Nigel Goodwin said:I'm talking domestic electronics, almost all PCB's are single-sided, the high cost of double-sided boards precludes their use.
3v0 said:I am talking about doing it at home. Pulsar is a brand of toner transfer paper.
EDIT: I am a bit of a chicken in regards to sending boards off to be made. There is this nagging fear of ending up with junk after waiting 2 weeks. When I get to the point where I need boards in quanity, and have a home brew board that works, I will have the pros produce it.
Kudos on your project site.
justDIY said:what are domestic electronics?
Shax said:I've tried to make decent double sided pcb's at home using transfer paper, and the results are definately not worth the effort.!
philba said:I have made numerous DS board via toner transfer. You just have to pay some care to getting proper alignment. Once you can do that, it's pretty easy. I make every boad DS these days.
One simplification is to make a DS board but use one side as a ground plane. That really simplifies your layout AND makes for a much quieter design as well. A tip - use thermals on the ground pads. It's a real PITA solder with out them.