PCB Carolina Breaks Attendance Record
November 10, 2022 | Andy Shaughnessy, I-Connect007Estimated reading time: 1 minute

PCB Carolina has been growing consistently for the past decade, and this year the show reached a milestone: more than 1,000 attendees. Yesterday, the show was the busiest I’ve ever seen it; I almost had to park off the NC State University campus. Fortunately, I’m an expert at “the parking lot game.” I waited until a guy was leaving and then I sniped his spot. Bam!
When I walked onto the show floor at PCB Carolina, I had to maneuver between attendees to get from one booth to another. The aisles were jammed, and the show stayed busy throughout the day, even when classes were in session. I didn’t see a single mask.
It was the same in the classrooms. Author Kathy Joseph led the keynote address, discussing the origins of electricity to a room that was standing room only. Many of the technical sessions were packed as well.
Exhibitors sang their praises of this one-day tabletop event, especially the bang-for-the-buck. A couple of times, I was talking with an exhibitor and an attendee asked, “Can you talk to me about this right now?” There’s a lot of tech concentrated in Research Triangle Park, and many of these attendees came to this show with immediate needs.
I spoke with Randy Faucette, co-founder of PCB Carolina and president of the design bureau Better Boards in nearby Cary. He said the show floor had sold out this year, and he had a waiting list of 15 companies who were ready to exhibit if anyone dropped out.
But as Randy explained, the biggest news was on the attendee side.
“For attendance, 2019 was our biggest year, right before COVID, and we were in the mid-900s,” he said. “When I checked earlier today, we had broken 1,000, which is a big milestone for us.”
Randy said the 84 exhibits are now spilling out into the hallways, but they would never want to relocate the show because the NCSU staff are so accommodating. The college also provides a pipeline of engineering students who are eager to network with people in our industry.
Lunch was a fantastic locally-catered barbecue and sweet tea like my grandma used to make. We had tasty Mexican food for dinner, along with some local craft beers. I bet next year’s PCB Carolina is going to be off the charts.
Suggested Items
North American PCB Industry Sales Up 11.3% in February
03/31/2025 | IPCIPC announced today the February 2025 findings from its North American Printed Circuit Board (PCB) Statistical Program. The book-to-bill ratio stands at 1.33.
Siemens Expands Industrial Copilot with New Generative AI-powered Maintenance Offering
03/24/2025 | SiemensThe Siemens Industrial Copilot is revolutionizing industry by enabling customers to leverage generative AI across the entire value chain – from design and planning to engineering, operations, and services.
I-Connect007 Editor’s Choice: Five Must-Reads for the Week
03/07/2025 | Andy Shaughnessy, I-Connect007It’s been a busy week. My must-reads include articles and news items on global trends and challenges, groundbreaking technology, the hunt for the elusive young PCB designers, and some personnel changes. We also have a great column on the value of following up and keeping promises. We’re all guilty of “dropping the ball” from time to time, aren’t we?
Target Condition: ‘Boomer to Zoomer: Do You Copy?’
03/04/2025 | Kelly Dack -- Column: Target ConditionLet’s just admit it. The baby boomer PCB designers are looking at retirement, but it’s been a good run. In the 1980s, many of us still “taped out” our PCB artwork layers and then drove them over to the graphic art service to be photo-reduced onto film positives and negatives. Then, almost overnight, the PCB design industry changed.
Hana Microelectronics Reports 2024 Financial Results
02/28/2025 | Hana Microelectronics GroupSales Revenue: Decreased by 5% year-over-year to THB 24,801 million in 2024, down from THB 26,152 million in 2023. In USD terms, sales revenue decreased by 6% to USD 703 million in 2024, compared to USD 751 million in 2023.