This is important because I do not believe any manufacturer using the thermal transfer method can put down anything less than a .020" trace repeatable and reliably. This is an issue here and it should be resolved one way or another. Especially in relation to Pulsar's product line.
So, let me get this straight. Out of the two alternatives; you not doing the Toner Transfer process properly, or me and others in this thread lying, you chose to believe that we are probably lying without doing any research on your own to verify either story. You must have a lot of friends.
1.
Because you gave it one try and cannot do less than 20mil does not mean others can't. For once, do something that I suggest and go to the Homebrew ML that I linked earlier. Pulsar advertises all over their site less than 10mil and shows plenty of images.
IF YOU CAN'T GET LESS THAN 20mil YOU ARE DOING IT WRONG. Talk to the Pulsar support guy, who is very helpful, about fixing your process. It's obvious that you don't have a lot of experience here, why can you not take advice? If you want more examples of people being able to do Toner Transfer with finer pitch, they have a search site called google. "toner transfer pcb" will give you loads of examples.
2. There is a post right here in this thread that I've already linked to that shows my process. It's using Pulsar paper, but it's the same process I use for Photo paper. I'm not going to take video if that's what you want.
https://www.electro-tech-online.com...ansfer-paper-cheap-and-easy.94601/#post760928
3. In the 8mil example close up picture you can clearly see the Wiznet W5100 markings on the chip. Here is the datasheet with package description. 0.4mm pin pitch
Image:
https://www.electro-tech-online.com/attachments/20090402-pcb-003-jpg.28060/
Datasheet with Package description.
https://www.wiznet.co.kr/rg4_board/...s_1&ss[p_num]=25&bd_num=15828&key=0&mode=down
It's nice to get really small traces but ultimately not useful to me or I would say most hobbyists. There's a reason I haven't done less than 8mil on a real board that I've made and populated, that's because I just don't need any smaller. I don't get any benefit out of it and without small easy vias, I don't see general hobbyists having any use for it either. ARM7 chips have all sorts of core power supply pins and PLL pins all mixed in with regular I/O pins, which makes making single sided boards with ARM7 chips a complete mess and even double sided board are a mess without being able to make vias under the chip. Those pcb's I have to get made in a boardhouse. If all you want is accuracy, check the direct print inkjet work done by some people. Check the pics in the Homebrew PCB group under 'C88 Test PCB'. Perfect solid 1mil trace test. Really nice. Unfortunately too much work for me for something I don't need.
I'll take a close up picture of a couple of my MSP430 QFN chips mounted on boards for you after work. Here's the Eagle board and schema files for that RF Node test board, for now, though. They can be viewed in the free version of Eagle Lite.
**broken link removed**
**broken link removed**