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Tim Wescott Tim Wescott is offline
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Default Metal Etching -- looking for the right terminology

On Wed, 08 Feb 2012 17:14:35 -0500, Jim Wilkins wrote:

"Tim Wescott" wrote in message
...
I have seen (held in my hands, actually), metal parts that are made by
etching thin steel with acid (presumably after printing on a resist).
It's great stuff for making optical stops, encoder wheels, and other
things where the worst that the metal has to resist is a stream of
photons smacking into it.

The steel in question appears to be either stainless steel or tin
plate, dead soft, and is maybe 5 or 10 mils thick.

What's the processing called in the industry? What sort of shop should
I direct someone to look for in their yellow pages or their Thomas
Register? What sort accuracies can one expect, and setup costs, and
fabrication costs?


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photochemical_machining
http://www.fotofab.com/about.php


Thanks for the link. That's exactly the process I was looking for, and
if they don't have enough search terms then I'm just not looking hard
enough!

--
My liberal friends think I'm a conservative kook.
My conservative friends think I'm a liberal kook.
Why am I not happy that they have found common ground?

Tim Wescott, Communications, Control, Circuits & Software
http://www.wescottdesign.com