@starseeker Within one mil, using just mechanical means? that's pretty impressive
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@starseeker ah so it's not like you could do accurate 1 mil lines with 1 mil spacing between them or anything?
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@Felthry well, the milling machine has a DRO that displays to the nearest 0.0002", so probably could do something like that
@starseeker Hah, maybe I should go to you for PCBs then
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@Felthry unfortunately that process is pretty different, not really something that can be done on a milling machine >.>
@starseeker I was mostly joking, but you *can* do PCBs on a milling machine, it's one of the cheapest ways to do them
it just has some enormous downsides
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@Felthry oh huh, really? Would've thought it was too labor-intensive to be worthwhile
@starseeker well i'm talking about a CNC machine, all automated
they make ones for that marketed towards makerspaces and particularly rich hobbyists, our university had one that we used a few times
would nto recommend honestly, just go with pcbway or something. you can't do vias on a milling machine, you only get two layers at the most, the precision is horrible (no 4mil/4mil width/spacing for you, more like 20mil/20mil), there's no soldermask or silkscreen, it's just all around bad really
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@starseeker i just was thinking about this because you said you might be able to do 1 mil width tracks with 1 mil spacing, and our current PCB manufacturer (PCBway) makes you pay through the nose for anything smaller than 6/6 and doesn't even do anything smaller than 4/4
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@Felthry well, that'd need a 1-mil-wide tool :P
@Felthry yeah, there's a PDX-based (iirc) PCB-to-order maker whose site I've got bookmarked that does 2-layer boards with 6mil/6mil width/spacing for $5/in^2 per 3 boards
@Felthry yeah, though it's just the diameter that needs to be that precise, not the position, so as long as the tool's accurate it's not too difficult ^^;