This is useful tip for anyone making or using surface mount components on PCBs.
It relies on access to a laser cutter, so if you donāt have one, look away nowā¦..
I cut a plastic stencil on the laser, align it with the PCB pads and then squeegee a thin layer of solder paste through the holes.
Peeling away the stencil will leave a perfect pattern of pads with the correct amount of solder on each one.
I have just successfully used this process on components with a 0.025ā³ pitch (0.65mm) ā thatās VERY small,
TheĀ prototype in the pictures has been made by my good friends at Spirit Circuits in the UK, and is a full plated through, double sided board. with immersion silver coating.
ALL PCB design programs these days will let you produce solder masks for surface mount boards. We take the solder mask output from the program, and direct it to plain, simple HPGL āplotterā files.
Here, Iām using Number One Systems āEasy-PCā, which may look very familiar to anyone using DesignSparkās free offering.
Turn OFF all the other layers, turn ON the mask layer, change the output device to āplotterā and plot to file. I mirrored the mask, but I am not sure its important. Technically, the holes benefit the process if they are smaller on the TOP of the stencil than the BOTTOM. This ensures a clean peel at the later stages
For more detail: Soldering stencils for DIY circuit boards.