- 
                                
                        
                         - News
 -  Books
                        
Featured Books
- design007 Magazine
 Latest Issues
Current Issue
                                                                                                        Power Integrity
Current power demands are increasing, especially with AI, 5G, and EV chips. This month, our experts share “watt’s up” with power integrity, from planning and layout through measurement and manufacturing.
                                                                                                        Signal Integrity
If you don’t have signal integrity problems now, you will eventually. This month, our expert contributors share a variety of SI techniques that can help designers avoid ground bounce, crosstalk, parasitic issues, and much more.
                                                                                                        Proper Floor Planning
Floor planning decisions can make or break performance, manufacturability, and timelines. This month’s contributors weigh in with their best practices for proper floor planning and specific strategies to get it right.
- Articles
 - Columns
 - Links
 - Media kit
 ||| MENU - design007 Magazine
 
The Data Format Effect on Business Costs
May 9, 2022 | I-Connect007 Editorial TeamEstimated reading time: 3 minutes
Nolan Johnson and Barry Matties talked with Axiom’s Rob Rowland and Kevin Bennett about current challenges facing EMS manufacturing. During this conversation, the pair discuss the impact of data file formats on pricing, manufacturing, and quality.
Barry Matties: Does it matter what the data format is or the data coming in?
Rob Rowland: Yes, absolutely. There are three formats we usually get from our customers: Gerber, ODB++, and IPC-2581.
Kevin Bennett: The ideal formats would be IPC-2581 or ODB++ because everything needed for programming is within one file. It only takes a couple of clicks to import those file types. The next step is to merge the bill of materials, and from that point you’re pretty much ready to export that data to the machine you’re going to program it on. But when it comes to Gerber data, which is unintelligent data, much more manual manipulation is required to get it to the same point as importing a comprehensive CAD file, like an ODB++. Gerber makes for a labor-intensive manual process. Basically, you draw a box over any given component footprint and then you must type the reference designator for each location. The extra steps make a huge difference in the time required to complete the offline programming.
Nolan Johnson: How much influence do you have over the file format your customers provide you?
Rowland: In general, we don’t have a lot of influence. Many years ago, we put together a document that articulates the differences between the three file formats and highlights the fact that we really need to get ODB++ or IPC-2581 file formats for programming. Over the years, we’ve tried to educate our customers on the extra programming effort to accurately and efficiently get the file formats right. Our customers try to accommodate our request and most of the time we get ODB++ or IPC-2581 files.
In our business, we also build boards that were designed 15 or 20 years ago and all they have are the Gerber files. As Kevin mentioned, when we do those, which might be 10% of the time, it takes Kevin and our other programmer three to four times longer to program a board with Gerber than it would if we had received either of the other two file formats.
Matties: Does your pricing change based on file format?
Rowland: Yes. If we get Gerber, we try to cover the additional cost. Programming is not an area we try to make a profit on, but we need to be able to cover our cost. If it takes us three to four times longer with a Gerber file, we need to cover the expense that we incur in doing that.
Matties: Do the customers realize that they would save money by changing the file format?
Rowland: Yes, if they’re able to, that is. We have some boards that are so old all they have are Gerber files. We work with what they have available to them. One of our engineers was on the original IPC-2581 committee and is an expert with that file format. He helped some of our customers understand the 2581 format and we showed their design groups how to output the 2581 file format.
Matties: Ultimately, it simplifies your customer’s life as well with fewer questions on the back end and so on.
Rowland: Yes, absolutely. If they give us what we need, then we don’t call them as many times, if at all, because we have what we need vs. having a lot of questions because the file format isn’t very good.
Matties: When we did a survey, Gerber was by far the one people are using most often. They’re familiar with it and there’s no significant penalty to keep using it or changing.
Rowland: Yes, I agree with you. In some cases, people don’t understand there are better file formats for programming than Gerber. Gerber files are best suited for PCB fabrication; this format was never intended for programming SMT machines. That’s why we work with our customers and try to educate them as much as we can so that we get the preferred file formats.
To read this entire conversation, which appeared in the May 2022 issue of SMT007 Magazine, click here.
Testimonial
"Our marketing partnership with I-Connect007 is already delivering. Just a day after our press release went live, we received a direct inquiry about our updated products!"
Rachael Temple - AlltematedSuggested Items
Life Is a Highway: A Family of 8 Turned the Entire U.S. Into a Learning and Working Environment
11/04/2025 | Steven Bowles, Lockheed MartinIt’s 6:45 a.m. in a modern A-frame cabin tucked into the misty edges of the Cascade Range in Arlington, Washington. I’ve just made a quick Nespresso, checked my calendar of virtual meetings, and verified the Airbnb’s Wi-Fi speed is holding steady. In the next room, my wife Lynsey corrals our six kids into breakfast while planning a day trip to Seattle’s Children’s Museum. By 7:30, I’m camera-ready in a makeshift office nook, leading a discussion on HDI PCB design for an IPC standards committee. After a busy day, our Bowles crew, ranging in age from 1 to 10 years old, is hands-on with activities and exhibits in the museum.
TTM Technologies Receives Two Awards from the Global Electronics Association at the 2025 IPC CEMAC Conference
11/03/2025 | Globe NewswireTTM Technologies, Inc. announced that two of its team members received prestigious Asia Steering Committee Outstanding Service Awards from the Global Electronics Association (formerly named IPC connecting global electronics industry) at the 2025 IPC CEMAC Electronics Manufacturing Annual Conference in Shanghai.
TTCI Brings Hands-On Test Engineering and IPC Training Expertise to PCB Carolina 2025
10/31/2025 | The Test Connection Inc.The Test Connection Inc. (TTCI), a trusted provider of electronic test and manufacturing solutions, and The Training Connection LLC (TTC-LLC) will exhibit at PCB Carolina on Wednesday, November 12, 2025, at the McKimmon Center at NC State University in Raleigh, North Carolina. Attendees can visit Table 4 to say hello to Bert Horner and Bill Graver, and learn more about their test engineering services and technical training programs.
The Training Connection Continues to Grow with Addition of Veteran IPC Trainer Bill Graver
10/30/2025 | The Training Connection LLCThe Training Connection, LLC (TTC-LLC), a premier provider of test engineering and development training, is proud to announce the addition of Bill Graver to its growing team of industry experts. A respected professional with more than 35 years in electronics manufacturing, Bill joins as an IPC Master Trainer, bringing a wealth of hands-on experience in PCB testing, failure analysis, and process improvement.
Electronics Industry Warns Mexico Tariffs Could Undercut U.S. Manufacturing and Supply Chain Resilience
10/24/2025 | Global Electronics AssociationAs negotiations over U.S.–Mexico trade policies near an October 29 deadline, the Global Electronics Association released a new policy brief, From Risk to Resilience: Why Mexico Matters to U.S. Manufacturing.