-
- 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
Rigid-flex Stackup: It’s a 3D World
September 20, 2023 | Andy Shaughnessy, Design007Estimated reading time: 3 minutes

Z-zero founder Bill Hargin has been studying stackup design techniques for years. He developed the company’s PCB stackup planning software, and he wrote The Printed Circuit Designer’s Guide to… Stackups: The Design within the Design.
In this interview, Bill shares his thoughts on designing rigid-flex stackups, the challenges they bring, and what rigid board designers need to know about designing stackups in 3D. “Flexperts” Mark Finstad of Flexible Circuit Technologies and Nick Koop of TTM Technologies also offer insight into the many tradeoffs that rigid-flex designers face.
You literally “wrote the book” on stackup design techniques. What are some of the unique challenges designers face with rigid-flex stackups?
As I often say, the mechanical world and the electrical world are at odds with each other. We wouldn’t need to concern ourselves with signal integrity if the physical/mechanical worlds weren’t involved.
The rigid-flex structure carries a lot of advantages—reliability, dynamic flexure, and the ability to get things done in tight spaces. But there’s the additional burden of needing to manage a mechanical world that has additional dimensions or “degrees of freedom.” A rigid stackup, for example, can easily be viewed in 2D, and that world is relatively easy for most electrical hardware engineers to understand and manage. You have impedance, frequency, and loss and then physical and electrical parameters that drive them. When flex substacks come into the picture, the fact that the flex portion needs to bend turns it into a 3D mechanical engineering problem that takes some time to learn. This is where you really need to lean on a flex fabricator’s expertise. Toward that end, I decided to poll a few “flexperts,” including Mark Finstad from Flexible Circuit Technologies and Nick Koop from TTM. Now I’ll weave their thoughts in with some of my own.
Mark emphasized that rigid-flex stackups have to blend both rigid and flexible base materials into the final product, and that these materials all stretch and shrink at different rates due to processes like etching and lamination. Additionally, flex materials can stretch and shrink just due to temperature and humidity changes. To further complicate things, these materials typically don’t move at the same rate in the X and Y axes. Most manufacturers have a good history with many materials, so they know how much to scale their artwork and programs to account for these dimensional instabilities. Also, laser direct imaging and smart laser and mechanical drills help with a lot of these issues, but the need to use those processing tools does come at a cost.
What do rigid board PCB designers need to understand about rigid-flex design and stackups?
Hargin: I don’t know if this will catch on, but I’ve started referring to rigid-flex design as “designing in 3D” or “3D design.” I doubt that someone who’s been designing rigid-flex boards (in 3D) for 20 years would learn much from my brief commentary here, so I’ll throw out a challenge to the rest of the designers who may benefit from this.
Along with HDI, rigid-flex PCBs have been trending up in recent years. Younger engineers would do well to start adding rigid-flex design skills to their repertoire in order to open up career opportunities. Maybe start with the rigid-flex chapter in my book on stackups and branch out from there. For signal integrity and EMI control, we like to have nearby reference planes for the current return path. But that additional
plane layer reduces the bend radius, so there are lots of new tradeoffs to make when you’re designing for flexibility.
There are some important differences relative to rigid PCBs that you should consider when designing a rigid-flex project. You can connect flex cores using a loose-leaf or bonded approach (Figure 1).
Click here to continue reading this interview which appears in the September 2023 issue of Design007 Magazine.
Suggested Items
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.
Real Time with... IPC APEX EXPO 2025: Advancements for Flexible Circuit Technologies
04/11/2025 | Real Time with...IPC APEX EXPOMark Finstad and Chris Clark from Flexible Circuit Technologies discuss their new marketing campaign for catheter circuits, featuring larger formats and advanced specifications. They explain the development of in-house materials for high-density circuits, enhancing cost competitiveness. They highlight the opening of a new facility in China for advanced assembly services, along with focused training sessions to fill industry education gaps and promote early customer engagement for better project outcomes.
CEE PCB Appoints Markus Voeltz to Business Development Director Europe
04/02/2025 | CEE PCBCEE PCB, a leading manufacturer of printed circuit boards (PCBs) and flexible printed circuits (FPCs) with 3 production facilities in China, is expanding its presence in Europe and began providing local support in March 2025. With 25 years of experience in the industry, the company is enhancing its commitment to European customers by providing more direct collaboration for technical inquiries and advice.
Real Time with... IPC APEX EXPO 2025: Discover Comprehensive PCB Solutions with American Standard Circuits
04/01/2025 | Real Time with...IPC APEX EXPOAnaya Vardya, CEO of American Standard Circuits, highlights the company's dedication to offering complete PCB solutions. The company provides free design packages and caters to various sectors, including military and telecommunications.
Global PCB Connections: A Field Engineer’s Perspective on the Top 10 Trends to Watch
03/27/2025 | Jerome Larez -- Column: Global PCB ConnectionsAs a field application engineer for a major Chinese PCB company, I see firsthand the challenges and, more excitingly, the trends shaping our industry. Talking to engineers, designers, and procurement teams worldwide, one thing is clear: PCBs have come a long way, but we’re barely scratching the surface of what’s possible. Here are 10 trends I believe will define our industry over the next decade.