-
- News
- Books
Featured Books
- pcb007 Magazine
Latest Issues
Current IssueThe Hole Truth: Via Integrity in an HDI World
From the drilled hole to registration across multiple sequential lamination cycles, to the quality of your copper plating, via reliability in an HDI world is becoming an ever-greater challenge. This month we look at “The Hole Truth,” from creating the “perfect” via to how you can assure via quality and reliability, the first time, every time.
In Pursuit of Perfection: Defect Reduction
For bare PCB board fabrication, defect reduction is a critical aspect of a company's bottom line profitability. In this issue, we examine how imaging, etching, and plating processes can provide information and insight into reducing defects and increasing yields.
Voices of the Industry
We take the pulse of the PCB industry by sharing insights from leading fabricators and suppliers in this month's issue. We've gathered their thoughts on the new U.S. administration, spending, the war in Ukraine, and their most pressing needs. It’s an eye-opening and enlightening look behind the curtain.
- Articles
- Columns
- Links
- Media kit
||| MENU - pcb007 Magazine
AltiumLive Summit—Munich, Germany, Part 1
November 7, 2017 | Pete Starkey, I-Connect007Estimated reading time: 12 minutes
The afternoon of the first day began with a keynote from Thomas Wischnack, senior expert for Hardware Development at Porsche Engineering Services, billed as “The PCB Doctor,” who would diagnose and treat common design challenges. He began by emphasising that rather than helping developers to cure sick PCBs, his objective was to help the PCBs by curing the developers! Dismissing some of the mythology surrounding EMC, he made it clear that there was no black magic—only physics, and that designs could often be made simpler after being “cured” and all unnecessary components had been removed. He offered interactive consulting for developers, project managers and management, and analysis of hardware, software and interfaces as well as coaching and assistance during validation and production setup. He reviewed some of the common pitfalls which caused designs to fail and once again stressed that the laws of physics could not be cheated and would win whatever the constraints of costs, project plans or project managers.
The basic question was always: “Where does the current flow?” and he had some set ideas on ground planes and where and where not to place ground connections, although not everyone agreed with his philosophy of avoiding copper flooding on outer layers—in particular with respect to the control of plating thickness.
To give an illustration of a design he had helped to optimise, he introduced Rainer Beerhalter, responsible for the design of large LED displays such as those used for outdoor advertising. Each 250mm square module had 176,000 tracks and 11,000 components of which 4096 were individually controllable LEDs. Power consumption had been reduced from 1kW to 420W per square metre: substantial when it took 272 kW to power the perimeter display in a football stadium!
Next came another parallel session, this time with a choice of three professional development courses: an introduction to PCB design with Altium Designer 18, presented by field applications engineer Damien Kirscher; creating documentation for successful PCB manufacturing by TTM field applications engineer Julie Ellis; and effective methods for advanced routing, by San Diego PCB’s Mike Creeden, kindly stepping in at short notice to deputise for Altium senior product manager Charles Pfeil.
I chose to attend Mike Creeden’s tutorial on advanced routing—lucky to get a seat it was so popular! Creeden discussed the routing and power delivery challenges of today and tomorrow. “Where to start? What are the goals for the end usage? What are the cost drivers? We want Revision 1 to work! Visit your PCB fabricator and learn his capabilities.”
He remarked that as speed and performance increased, so did heat, driving a reduction in operating voltages and resulting in reduced package sizes and increased pin counts. With increasing placement and routing density, power delivery and signal integrity became all the more important. To ensure success, routing should be properly constrained. But over-constraining rules should be avoided. The key was in finding the right balance of compromise. “Do a good placement—it will tell you a lot about how feasible it is to route.”
He emphasised the importance of power delivery and power integrity analysis: “If you can’t power your ICs, how can you route them? Where do you put your power plane? Where is your signal return path?” He held the audience enthralled—they hung on the every word of a top IPC Designer Certification Master Instructor as he led them through the complexities of HDI and via fan-outs for fine-pitch BGAs and explained board stack-up options, sequential lamination, thin materials, blind and buried microvias. “How many signal layers do I need?”
An understanding of electromagnetic theory was fundamental to predicting electrical performance and signal integrity at gigahertz frequencies, managing a field to achieve high capacitance and low inductance, and to realise stack-ups that supported functional EMC. “Ground is the most important signal in the circuit.”
Routing differential pairs to efficiently and accurately meet requirements was a feature of the Altium Designer 18 release, and Creeden called upon Altium field applications engineer Carsten Kindler for a live demonstration to illustrate how the system automatically adjusted line widths and spacings according to the stated design rules—one of several enhancements that led to new automation possibilities.
Another difficult decision to make—this time to choose one of three technical breakout sessions: Bernd Schroeder from Fraunhofer Institute for Reliability and Microintegration, describing a novel thermal analysis tool from Altium for online computation of thermal maps based on power dissipation values of components; Martin Gaudion from Polar Instruments, discussing methods for calculating insertion loss with roughness of copper foil; or Dirk Stans from Eurocircuits reviewing the pitfalls to be avoided when creating production-ready PCB and PCBA data.
My choice was the Dirk Stans workshop. A hobby-horse of mine in my PCB fabrication days had been trying to build the interface between design and pre-production engineering—with limited success because few purpose-built software tools were available two decades ago. I was interested to see how Eurocircuits, most of whose sales are on-line, had equipped themselves to deal with over 100,000 orders annually from 11,000 customers for prototype and small batch work, much of it on quick-turn delivery. You certainly need a slick front-end to be able to offer that sort of service!
When Stans spoke of the days when DfM principles existed mainly in the heads of a few professional layout people and a virtual wall existed between the designer and the fabricator, over which the designer would throw the manufacturing information in the hope that the guy on the other side would sort it out, I knew exactly what he meant! “But now I have made a window in that wall”—he described how he had developed a comprehensive set of smart tools and processes to enable intelligent communication through that traditional barrier, and in many cases to educate and assist the customer in avoiding production delays or adding unnecessary cost to the job. He listed some of the key features of his on-line tools, and explained in detail how they enabled accurate price calculation and capability and manufacturability assessment, as well as identifying cost drivers and advising on efficient material utilisation. He showed examples of typical design errors, data anomalies and design-rule violations revealed by his automated analytical procedures; in each case the customer had the opportunity to view the problem, approve any proposed change and formally accept it before proceeding.
The capability of the system extended to the benefit of the assembler, with routines for resolving CAD to CAM issues, rationalising ‘jibberish’ bills of material, access to extensive component libraries, and the facility to optimise the PCBA design flow with smart menus, PCB visualisation tools, automatic pre-CAM procedures, BOM and component placement checkers and PCBA visualisers.
There was obviously still the option for people to talk to people, and Eurocircuits offered wide-ranging technical support, but the proven facility existed for the automated creation of production-ready PCB and PCBA data.
The day’s formal programme completed, a superb buffet dinner was provided for delegates. But where did they sit? They realised the significance of the coloured tags on their ID badges—they indicated membership of a team, mainly composed of people they had never met before. One table, one team. And after the dessert dishes had been cleared away, each team was presented with a large box and told not to open it until directed.
On the word “go” all was revealed. Each box contained components, tools and instructions for the building of a battle robot. No chainsaws of flame-throwers, just an articulated spike for bursting balloons, of which two were to be attached to the back-side of each completed machine. From my neutral position it was fascinating to observe the dynamics of team formation, cooperative work-sharing and product-assembly against the clock. Records were broken!
The robots having been successfully assembled, although sometimes only after an animated debate and a couple of re-work cycles, the second part of the exercise was a knock-out tournament—last team standing after everyone else’s balloons had been punctured. Great fun, great spirit of competition, and great to see the “connect” element of the AltiumLive theme being further promoted. And the beer was good!
Editor's note: To read the part two of this article, click here.
Suggested Items
Copper Price Surge Raises Alarms for Electronics
07/15/2025 | Global Electronics Association Advocacy and Government Relations TeamThe copper market is experiencing major turbulence in the wake of U.S. President Donald Trump’s announcement of a 50% tariff on imported copper effective Aug. 1. Recent news reports, including from the New York Times, sent U.S. copper futures soaring to record highs, climbing nearly 13% in a single day as manufacturers braced for supply shocks and surging costs.
I-Connect007 Editor’s Choice: Five Must-Reads for the Week
07/11/2025 | Andy Shaughnessy, Design007 MagazineThis week, we have quite a variety of news items and articles for you. News continues to stream out of Washington, D.C., with tariffs rearing their controversial head again. Because these tariffs are targeted at overseas copper manufacturers, this news has a direct effect on our industry.I-Connect007 Editor’s Choice: Five Must-Reads for the Week
Digital Twin Concept in Copper Electroplating Process Performance
07/11/2025 | Aga Franczak, Robrecht Belis, Elsyca N.V.PCB manufacturing involves transforming a design into a physical board while meeting specific requirements. Understanding these design specifications is crucial, as they directly impact the PCB's fabrication process, performance, and yield rate. One key design specification is copper thieving—the addition of “dummy” pads across the surface that are plated along with the features designed on the outer layers. The purpose of the process is to provide a uniform distribution of copper across the outer layers to make the plating current density and plating in the holes more uniform.
Trump Copper Tariffs Spark Concern
07/10/2025 | I-Connect007 Editorial TeamPresident Donald Trump stated on July 8 that he plans to impose a 50% tariff on copper imports, sparking concern in a global industry whose output is critical to electric vehicles, military hardware, semiconductors, and a wide range of consumer goods. According to Yahoo Finance, copper futures climbed over 2% following tariff confirmation.
Happy’s Tech Talk #40: Factors in PTH Reliability—Hole Voids
07/09/2025 | Happy Holden -- Column: Happy’s Tech TalkWhen we consider via reliability, the major contributing factors are typically processing deviations. These can be subtle and not always visible. One particularly insightful column was by Mike Carano, “Causes of Plating Voids, Pre-electroless Copper,” where he outlined some of the possible causes of hole defects for both plated through-hole (PTH) and blind vias.