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File -> Print -> Electronics

Type
Audio
Tags
hardware hacking
Authors
Jeff Gough
Event
Chaos Communication Congress 27th (27C3) 2010
Indexed on
Mar 27, 2013
URL
http://mirror.fem-net.de/CCC/27C3/mp3-audio-only/27c3-4099-en-file_-_print_-_electronics.mp3
File name
27c3-4099-en-file_-_print_-_electronics.mp3
File size
23.4 MB
MD5
5594960205c0c34b1692d709a62d7b8f
SHA1
f0a2db4aed48ff8237c111ca36bbfce65cecfb8d

Are you ready to wake up from the cult of Arduino? Tired of plugging together black-box pre-built modules like a mindless drone, copying and pasting in code you found on Hackaday? You've soldered together your TV-Be-Gone, built your fifth Minty Boost, and your bench is awash with discarded Adafruit packaging and Make magazines. It's time to stop this passive consumption. It's time to create something that is truly yours. It's time, my friend, to design your first circuit board. And you'll need a machine to print it. Outsourcing printed circuit board (PCB) manufacture can be expensive and slow. You want your board now, for free. And designing PCB's is hard. You'll make mistakes, and some boards will be wasted. You can etch your own PCB's at home but the process is fiddly, and notoriously difficult to perfect. What if you had a printer that could make PCB's? A rapid prototyping machine for circuit boards. In this talk I will present my progress towards an inexpensive PCB printer by reverse engineering Epson inkjet technology. And I'm not talking about the crappy print-and-bake method you might have seen on the internet. Come and learn about the miracle of microfluidics within the modern consumer inkjet printer, and how to push it to do new, exciting things. I'll be describing some reverse engineering techniques, a bit of electronics circuit design and the potential for 3D microfabrication with inkjet technology. A PCB will be printed and etched live, on stage, at 27C3!

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