Reddit Reddit reviews Circuit Scribe Non-Toxic Conductive Silver Ink Pen – Award Winning Design That Makes Creating Circuits and Switches Easy As Doodling – Writes on Any Paper!

We found 10 Reddit comments about Circuit Scribe Non-Toxic Conductive Silver Ink Pen – Award Winning Design That Makes Creating Circuits and Switches Easy As Doodling – Writes on Any Paper!. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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Circuit Scribe Non-Toxic Conductive Silver Ink Pen – Award Winning Design That Makes Creating Circuits and Switches Easy As Doodling – Writes on Any Paper!
Non-toxic, silver conductive ink pen - Write on any surface your regular rollerball pen will!Pen only - 1x silver conductive ink pen that can draw 60-200 meters (depends on paper and surface type)Resistance is 0.05-0.2ohms/sq/mil (2-10ohms per cm of writing)The most successful conductive ink pen - funded on Kickstarter by over 12,000 backers!
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10 Reddit comments about Circuit Scribe Non-Toxic Conductive Silver Ink Pen – Award Winning Design That Makes Creating Circuits and Switches Easy As Doodling – Writes on Any Paper!:

u/GunplaAddict · 4 pointsr/MechanicalKeyboards

Easy fix my friend.

u/___Mocha___ · 3 pointsr/diyaudio
u/RoninSpectre · 3 pointsr/functionalprint

Here is one I found on Amazon, but I'm sure there are several different variants you can find

https://www.amazon.com/Circuit-Scribe-Non-Toxic-Conductive-Silver/dp/B00OZATJ3A

u/HiNu7 · 2 pointsr/PlaystationClassic

how would this pen work? https://www.amazon.com/Circuit-Scribe-Non-Toxic-Conductive-Silver/dp/B00OZATJ3A

I have soldering stuff before, Mostly gameboy advances and what not but this pen seems neat.

u/Silntdoogood · 2 pointsr/science
u/Techwood111 · 2 pointsr/electricians

Yep. Now, be careful as you gently abrade away the coating, as the ink won't be that thick. I'd suggest using a voltmeter to tell when you are through.

You can use very fine sandpaper, pumice, or something similar (even a razor blade, but that is riskier) to get the coating off.

Read up on whatever conductive material you use. Conducto compound, which I have always used (but wouldn't recommend for you; I have a lifetime's supply of it, and it was CRAZY-expensive), needs to be cured at 100°C, or with UV light.

Here are some things to take a look at:
https://www.adafruit.com/categories/221

Also:
http://www.amazon.com/Circuit-Scribe-Conductive-Ink-Pen/dp/B00OZATJ3A

u/doctechnical · 1 pointr/interestingasfuck

Yeah, I remember the kickstarter for this. You can buy one here, but they're $30 a pop. It's silver that makes that ink conduct.

u/JamesTrendall · 1 pointr/PcBuild

Take the motherboard out and look for blown capacitors or damaged board.

Some places can just replace the capacitors (Very small soldering iron tip and flux)

I had a similar problem not too long ago. Turns out the bottom of the board had a short. Looked like water damage had erroded the board away and broke part of the copper connection inside the board itself. That's harder to fix but you can use something like this https://www.amazon.co.uk/Circuit-Scribe-Conductive-Ink-Pen/dp/B00OZATJ3A to repair the connection.

I advise against this but as a last ditch effort you could try.

Other than that it's a new mobo i'm afraid. Good news tho. Motherboards are fairly cheap (Depending on what type you want/need)