It is easier than ever to produce projects with nice enclosures thanks to 3D printing and laser cutting. However, for a polished look, you also need a labeled front panel. We’ve looked at several methods for doing that in the past, but we enjoyed [Accidental Science’s] video showing his method for making laminated panels.
His first step is to draw the panel in Inkscape, and he has some interesting tips for getting the most out of the program. He makes a few prints and laminates one of them. The other is a drill guide. You use the drill guide to make openings in the panel, which could be aluminum, steel, plastic, or whatever material you want to work in.
The laminated print goes on last with just enough glue to hold it. Is it a lot of work? You bet it is. But the results look great. There are a number of things to look out for, so if you plan to do this, the video will probably save you from making some mistakes.
There are many ways to get this job done. We’ve asked you for ideas before and, as usual, you came through. If you want a different take on laminated panels, there are a few different tips you can glean from this project.
When printing something make sure to check if your printer keeps correct dimmensions. In my case, to achieve accurate results from my laser printer I have to scale page with using 101,4% factor. Otherwise printed panel (or toner-transfer PCB, or cutout in aluminium or whatever) would be too small in one dimmension. Length seems to be perfectly accurate.
Thanks for the memories!. gEDA pcb printed a calibration page with values to feed back in to the program.
I did this for a switch panel on my old Jeep… all manually, of course – being prior to laser cutters and 3d printers. Lots of careful drilling, shearing, Dremel-ing, and filing. The hardest part was getting the backlit labels right. I chose printing on transparency sheets with a common printer – as I did for circuit masks. To get the label opaque enough, I had to print them twice over the same sheet. Alignment of the multiple passes was a painfully repetitive “broad side of a barn” process. Finally got them all satisfactory for the purpose.
The most annoying task is making round scales. There are plugins and tools for that but adding values/text most of the time is a manual job…
Inkscape can fit text to an arbitrary path, including arcs. Would that help ?
Inkscape’s transforms will let you do something like “replicate this line, translate, and rotate it 5 degrees” (from the simple transform to arbitrary transformation matrix), which is probably more usable for something like tick marks.
Not that applying text to an arc won’t work, that’s just probably not what jansprojekteJanW was asking.
This is a nice method. I’m lazy. I have PCBs made, with solder resist and silkscreen colours as I need. Much easier. But multicolour panels like in the video aren’t possible.
With the pcb method it’s possible to have electronics on the back, and/or screening. Can have various FR4 thicknesses, and even aluminium if required.
It’s very cost effective for low volumes. The results look great, and are super precise. I’ve even been known to have edge plating for some extra bling!
https://jlcpcb.com/resources/multicolor-silkscreen-pcb
+1 ….. PCB panels every time ….. super easy and look great.
Yes agree, Al-“pcbs” with solder-mask, silkscreen print & graphics, CNC slots & cut-outs; made and shipped quickly for very low cost – it’s a real game-changer.
Or also ordinary FR4, for sure. Even cheaper.
QCAD is a better choice for drafting, IMNSHO. Inkscape is for “artistic” drawings and SVG, QCAD is for technical drawings and DXF.
Dry moly spray and a laser looks pretty good and has quite fine resolution. Only black, though.
But MUCH faster and easier.
Anyone have a good source for getting the front panels machined/cut? Ideally mail-order. Send ’em the metal and some form of cutting data and get back a cut panel?
I only know of it anecdotally, but this sounds like what I’ve heard that Send Cut Send does.
I ‘ve used a company called Front Panel Express in the past. Very nice panels! But these days I use a laser to do either front-engraved or back-engraved front panels out of 1/16” sign engraving plastic.
What I found is that outside advertising boards are also a cheap option (even including brushed aluminium). That is if you can live with dibond sandwich panels. Lots of companies include cnc contouring. If you ask nicely, they also do the inside holes. O.o.m. 10 Euros for 19″ front panels.
With the design you have to take into account that the print and contouring are not always perfectly aligned (in experience ca .5mm shifts possible). And typically I see they use 2mm mil, so expect rounded inside corners.
I have had made front and back a panels in Dibond for the power supply I was making. They look really great, and it was cheap. I am not sure why it is not a more popular panel making method.
Anyway, this was seven years ago and I still haven’t finished building that power supply, but on the plus side, it will look great once I will have completed the design.