I went with SMT (Surface Mount Technology) LEDs, it made my life much simpler in several ways.
1) they were cheaper than the same ‘conventional’ LED
2) They have no leads, so you don’t have to worry about drilling holes in a PC board or using a breadboard.
3) they are drastically thinner, so they take up less space at the edge of your display and the whole
mess is easier to mount.
NOT because I believe I made the ‘absolute best’ choices, but to answer in advance those who will ask, I used these: http://www.mouser.com/Search/ProductDetail.aspx?R=OP200virtualkey54210000virtualkey828-OP200
They are 880mn, which was well below the transmissive cutoff of my acrylic, also they were only 26cents each
when I was buying 150 of em. I arrayed them in series groups of 5 with a 330 ohm resister at the head of each
series group, strung the groups in one big parallel, and hit it with a 12V 1A wallwart...they are BRIGHT, and
with 75 LEDS in a 24"line down each short edge of my screen, they sure seem to do the job, so far no failures.
Then I lucked into an 875mn bandpass filter dirt cheap that was the last piece of overstock a nice man who makes
high end filters had laying around.
Here’s a a couple of pictures: my own table’s wiring method, my boards after etching, one that can be used as a
printing template for anyone wishing to duplicate it.
You will need:
1) laser printer, OR a copy shop (I used PIP) where you can make laser copies...inkjet will NOT work!
2) heavyweight glossy photo paper (again, PIP)
3) an Iron...an ordinary clothes iron
4) tub of water (I used the bathtub)
5) blank PC board (any electronics shop, even radio shack)
6) etching solution (again, even radio shack)
7) a ziplock freezer baggie
8) acetone (nail polish remover)
9) some very fine sandpaper (600 grit or finer), steel wool, or a green scratchie
Radio shack even sells a basic kit for around $20 that contains a small blank PC board, some etch solution, a
sharpie, and a chunk of green scratchie. It may be all you need, and you can just follow their instructions for
mediocre results that work, regardless it’s a viable choice for etching solution if you can’t find it elsewhere.
My method does a MUCH better job of giving you a cleanly etched PC board (that no one will ever see if nothing
fries in public).
I bought it all...including a replacement for the Mrs’ cheapo iron for a total of $40, made the PC boards I
needed and a spare set.
If you want you can draw your design with any graphics program, for those who are insecure, there is a free
circuit board design program available at: http://www.expresspcb.com
It even includes ‘templates’ for various components so you can leave the correct space between things.
1) Draw your circuit board on your computer, life size, save it as a .PDF or a .PSD (if you use that program
above, ‘print’ it to a file using the PDF driver). if you are going to PIP you may be able to email it to them
to print for you. You may also print it out with inkjet & have someone laser copy that, but your contrast will
not be as great as if it is printed from a file.
2) Have it laser printed as DARK as you can onto heavyweight GLOSSY photo paper, laser copied is the same for
our purposes. You want your white parts to stay white, but you want as much toner as you can get on the black
parts. (I made two copies & was glad as it allowed me to screw up the first try of the next step without having to
go back to PIP)
3) LIGHTLY sand/steel wool/green scratchie your PC board to clean the oxidization off of it, don’t get carried
away, you need to leave the copper
then wash it with acetone or alcohol to remove any grease.
4) Place your laser copy of the design on your PC board, printed side against the copper. Iron it on to the PC
board. Use the highest setting. Don’t forget to use some cardboard or something to protect your floor or table.
And don’t be gentle, you will want to smash down quite hard while you iron it so you get pressure as well as
heat (I was a wimp on the smashing the first time, it took forever to get a bad adhesion, try#2 I got medieval
on it and it adhered in abt 3 minutes VERY well, but I did put a couple of scratches on the iron...the MRS
was not pleased...probably some middle ground available somewhere).
5) Toss it in a tub of hot water. Let it soak for abt 5 minutes & then begin rubbing on the paper. Glossy photo
paper has a clay surface that gives it the gloss. As the paper softens, you can rub it right off of the clay.
The clay that is not mixed with toner will also rub off. The toner has been heat fused to the copper, and will
be rather difficult to remove. I was able to remove the last of my clay/paper debris by lightly cleaning it
with a ‘green scratchie’.
6) Dry off your design, and if it needs any touch-up use a sharpie marker. Sharpies DO resist etching solution,
but not really well, so if there are big problems, you may wish to redo the transfer.
7) Traditionally you put etching solution and the board in a rubber or porcelin tray, and then must be concerned
about how to agitate it to release bubbles, and lifting it to tell when it’s done without making a big acidic,
staining mess...but I don’t play that way. Instead put your PC board in the ziplock freezer baggie, pour in
the etching solution, zip it shut, and toss it back into the warm water to allow heat to speed up the etching
process (also containing it in case your baggie leaks). Now you can agitate it by smooshing the baggie with
your fingers (still underwater, safety first), and check it the same way without removing it.
8) When it is sufficiently etched, unzip the baggie, remove the PC board and toss it back in the water to get
the etching solution off of it. If you plucked it out with your fingers (me), wash them you moron. Zip the
baggie back up & dispose of it, or pour it back into the original container to reuse or dispose of (careful
about pouring or you’ll have that mess we avoided previously). You can reuse etching solution more than once,
but it does eventaully saturate & stop etching...do NOT store it in the baggie as it will leak when you aren’t
watching & the Mrs will shoot you in the face
9) Clean the toner off of the PC board with acetone (and a green scratchie if you’re impatient like me)
10) Drill holes for lead wires if you need to. Trim the boards if you need to. Solder & enjoy.
