Hi All,
A little while ago I got hold of an old Tally wide format dotmatrix printer - after pondering what to do with it for a while I decided that it should become a PCB plotter.
In the same way as the original poster, I plot directly onto copperclad (the Stabilo OHpen is my favourate - I found it to give thicker coverage than the Staedtler). Part of my motivation was to avoid the additional expense of photoresist versus plain copperclad, as well as the additional scope for error in the exposure process.
My ideal machine would be a mill which would cut tracks directly and do the drills, thus completely eliminating chemicals and their attendent mess/ploution etc. I'm using FeCl by the way - takes an age without a heated etch tank, and I think that a better result could be achieved with a faster etch - this giving the etchant less chance to soak through the resist pen.
The results a just about aceptable, but certainly beat no PCB at all! I do everything on a 0.1" grid, doing only through hole work so far. There is quite a lot of backlash in the "paper feed" axis, which is really the limiting factor for acuracy, while the finest pitch is limited by the thickness of the pen tip.
I re-used the original motor driver ICs, but built my own control circuitary. The MCU on the plotter handles the primative PEN UP, PEN DOWN, MOVE XY actions, and a host programme on the PC hands out the instructions. As this was a bit of a quick lashup, the easiest format for me to read in was DXF (drawing exchange format) so I'm currently doing all my PBC layouts in a general purpose CAD package!
I've just taken some photos of it to share with you, but I'm damned if I can get them off the camera. I'll do it at work tomorrow and upload them then.
Interesting thread (interesting forum)... Thanks.
(edited for typos)