ToddChapman
Electrical
Hello. I have been on google for hours and came up with nowhere.
I need to come up with a low cost solution for laminating glass with PVB or other poly as sublayer. In some cases there will be 1/16 or 1/18 glass on top of a sublayer of acrylic or polycarbonate. In other versions, there will be Lexan MR on top of a sublayer.
The point is to have a transparent top layer of glass or some poly material, the top layer gets digitally printed from the back side in reverse. The sub layer covers a PCB(electrodes for capacitive touch sensing(Qprox)). The panels are 4" x 6.6", and total thickness will be around 1/8" when laminated.
Can anyone recommend a source to do this lamination process on a shoe string? Ideally, some small oven or oven with press would be great, small quantity production is OK. I understand that heat and pressure are the method, but I see no small solution.
I have talked to big companies, but their processes are too time consuming and costly for prototyping and experimenting to get the right look. The quotes I have from several companies are not doable, so home brew is the only path.
Thanks for any suggestions on how to set up for lamination.
I need to come up with a low cost solution for laminating glass with PVB or other poly as sublayer. In some cases there will be 1/16 or 1/18 glass on top of a sublayer of acrylic or polycarbonate. In other versions, there will be Lexan MR on top of a sublayer.
The point is to have a transparent top layer of glass or some poly material, the top layer gets digitally printed from the back side in reverse. The sub layer covers a PCB(electrodes for capacitive touch sensing(Qprox)). The panels are 4" x 6.6", and total thickness will be around 1/8" when laminated.
Can anyone recommend a source to do this lamination process on a shoe string? Ideally, some small oven or oven with press would be great, small quantity production is OK. I understand that heat and pressure are the method, but I see no small solution.
I have talked to big companies, but their processes are too time consuming and costly for prototyping and experimenting to get the right look. The quotes I have from several companies are not doable, so home brew is the only path.
Thanks for any suggestions on how to set up for lamination.