-
- News
- Books
Featured Books
- smt007 Magazine
Latest Issues
Current IssueIntelligent Test and Inspection
Are you ready to explore the cutting-edge advancements shaping the electronics manufacturing industry? The May 2025 issue of SMT007 Magazine is packed with insights, innovations, and expert perspectives that you won’t want to miss.
Do You Have X-ray Vision?
Has X-ray’s time finally come in electronics manufacturing? Join us in this issue of SMT007 Magazine, where we answer this question and others to bring more efficiency to your bottom line.
IPC APEX EXPO 2025: A Preview
It’s that time again. If you’re going to Anaheim for IPC APEX EXPO 2025, we’ll see you there. In the meantime, consider this issue of SMT007 Magazine to be your golden ticket to planning the show.
- Articles
- Columns
Search Console
- Links
- Media kit
||| MENU - smt007 Magazine
Book Excerpt: 'The Electronics Industry’s Guide to… The Evolving PCB NPI', Chapter 3
January 4, 2023 | I-Connect007 Editorial TeamEstimated reading time: 2 minutes

Chapter 3: Streamlining Data Preparation
With the need to move design data efficiently into manufacturing for assembly and test purposes, starting from a single source of intelligent data seems to be obvious. However, with different applications with different capabilities this can be difficult to achieve. Real-world support for any format can vary between machine and software vendors. The optimal goal should be to create a single digital twin of the product upfront regardless of the downstream applications that need that data.
If we consider the PCB and the parts being placed on it, their data should have significant commonality across the many steps in PCB assembly and test. Typically, we find that process and test engineers think there is much more machine-specific data across their lines than there really is in practice.
Solutions exist in the market that can manage this common data and then deliver machine-specific information to the machine software as needed, on demand. In this way, the factory can maintain the common data, but, more importantly, they have a common part library data that is independent of the line. Remember when we talked about the move from mixed vendor lines to single vendor lines and mixed-line factories? The ability to manage part data in this context is key to efficiently streamlining the NPI phase.
First, let’s start with the typical data preparation tasks that form the base for a typical NPI flow. Being able to accurately import the source layout CAD data is an important first step. As we discussed in chapter one, ODB++ and IPC 2581 provide a common, standardized data format for layout information. However, not all CAD data is the same, even in the context of one format such as ODB++. This is because different designers use unique conventions in their source libraries. The position and rotation of each component placement can be inconsistent for any single format because each component location is based on the definition of the library cell that it references. Why does this decrease efficiency?
Consider that, during the SMT process, the machine picks a component up from a feeder and positions that component, rotating it before releasing it on the board. What the machine considers for the rotation is based on its perspective and the orientation of the part in the feeder. However, what the design software considers for position and orientation is based on an arbitrarily defined cell library. The variations in that cell library are a result of the environment that the designer works in. What is the origin of the cell? Is it pin 1? Is it the middle of the part? Is it a corner on the cell? What is the rotation of the part at 0 degrees? Is it pin 1 to the left or to the right? What about IC components with many pins? Is pin 1 in the lower right corner, or maybe the lower left?
See Figure 3.1 for how a designer may have defined their source footprint, which is what is used for placement position and angle. We have a polarized part here but pin 2 is associated with the silkscreen indicator.
To continue reading this chapter of The Electronics Industry's Guide to... The Evolving PCB NPI Process, download your free book today!
Suggested Items
Hunting for Clues: Feng Xue Solving Circuit Board 'Crimes' With AOI Standard
05/08/2025 | Linda Stepanich, IPCWhen residents in sleepy English villages needed a top-tier detective to solve a murder, they called on Belgian super-sleuth Hercule Poirot, author Agatha Christie’s fictional detective famous for using his “little grey cells” to solve crimes. In the same way, IPC standards development committees, when creating a standard to detect defects in circuit boards using Automated Optical Inspection (AOI), call on IPC A-Team, Hercule.
IPC Strengthens Global Focus with Promotion of Sanjay Huprikar to Chief Global Officer
05/08/2025 | IPCIPC, the global electronics association, announces the promotion of Sanjay Huprikar to chief global officer. This newly created position reflects the association’s forward-looking strategy and industry needs to strengthen the electronics supply chain.
Navigating Global Manufacturing in an Era of Uncertainty
05/07/2025 | Philip Stoten, ScoopThe EMS industry faces unprecedented challenges as global trade tensions rise and tariff announcements create market uncertainty. In an overview of IPC Europe’s podcast, MADE IN EUROPE, industry experts from GPV and Zollner examine how these developments impact our businesses and customers, and what strategies will prevail in this new landscape.
Nick Koop Launches IPC Flex Design Class
05/06/2025 | Andy Shaughnessy, Design007 MagazineNick Koop is director of flex technology for TTM Technologies, and he’s been a staple of IPC’s flex committees for decades. He’s also a longtime flex design instructor, and he’s about to debut a new IPC class, Flex and Rigid-Flex Design for Manufacturability, which will run May 12–21. In this interview, Nick tells us about this new class and what attendees can expect to learn.
The Government Circuit: Trump’s Trade War Disrupts the Electronics Ecosystem
05/06/2025 | Chris Mitchell -- Column: The Government CircuitThere is certainly no shortage of work to be done in the IPC Government Relations department, as the U.S. waged a tariff campaign on practically every industrial country in the world and several countries embarked on high-tech initiatives with a mix of approaches to the crucial foundations of electronics manufacturing. Indeed, the breadth and speed of U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff campaign continues to be a serious challenge for our industry.