-
- News
- Books
Featured Books
- design007 Magazine
Latest Issues
Current IssueSignal 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.
Showing Some Constraint
A strong design constraint strategy carefully balances a wide range of electrical and manufacturing trade-offs. This month, we explore the key requirements, common challenges, and best practices behind building an effective constraint strategy.
- Articles
- Columns
- Links
- Media kit
||| MENU - design007 Magazine
IPS Engineers on AI and More
February 26, 2024 | Barry Matties, I-Connect007Estimated reading time: 4 minutes

Over the past few months, we have met several of IPS's team members. IPS has been a manufacturer of wet process equipment for printed circuit board fabrication for over 30 years, working from its Cedar City, Utah, location. In part one of this interview, you will meet IPS team members Travis Houchin, Larry Boehm, and Kaal Glazier. Travis has been in the industry for 15 years, Larry for 20 years, and Kaal, who studied manufacturing engineering in college and graduated in 2019, joined IPS last year. With this group of two seasoned industry experts and the voice of the next generation, we cover several topics, including AI, and some useful tips when considering equipment, especially in brownfield sites.
Barry Matties: Larry, have you been in the industry for many years?
Larry Boehm: Starting in high school, I worked for Viking Chemical, which did conformal coatings. We mixed resins, material, and hand-dunked PC boards. That was around 1986—and I wonder why I'm falling apart. I have been with IPS since last year.
Matties: What changes or surprises stick out over your decades-long career?
Boehm: First, the technology: everything from the laminates, signal integrity, I/O speeds, and the complexity of vias. You're now looking at things so complex from a basic double-sided board. Now you have Kapton® materials and other technology, for example, in missile programs, space, and satellite programs. It's never-ending, and it's such an advanced materials market.
Matties: Kaal, you’re fresh in the industry. What has caught your attention? What's been most interesting to you?
Kaal Glazier: There is a lot to be considered. One thing is being at the manufacturing facilities and seeing how packed some manufacturers can be when it comes to real estate—trying to get a new process into such a small area. That challenge makes it a lot of fun for our engineering team. While looking at how we meet customers' demands in such a small space, I've asked a few times about going vertical, making a double-decker machine while keeping hazardous fluids contained in a very controlled way. It can be really difficult to always meet the demand from customers within the constraints they have. They understand the constraints, so is this just a challenge from them? I want to see where we can present solutions and value to the customer. It's not like everyone has an extra $500,000 to build a room for a new machine.
Matties: I think you're keying in on something because it's a challenge when there's a need to upgrade at brownfield sites. Travis, overall, what should fabricators be paying attention to today?
Travis Houchin: They should be paying attention to current trends in the market and knowing what’s best for your customer's future. Also, look at how new technology and equipment can improve or add capabilities to your manufacturing. I think that's key. Specifically for fabricators, pay attention to manufacturing and future trends to ensure you're always up to date on any new technology and what's out there.
Matties: I am curious how often AI comes up in your conversations with customers.
Houchin: Maybe 20–30%. We’re certainly going to be experiencing some fast-coming changes in technology. However, it's still unknown exactly how it will best be used. I've noticed it comes up more in conversations around our equipment, but it's still pretty new to be a focused topic of conversation. It will be a part of our lives. As we learn more about how it can help us, it will definitely be available and widely used. Right now, it can be a competitive advantage.
Boehm: We must remember that AI can be a scary area for many folks, especially regarding the data and information that can be collected and compiled statistically and physically. It's kind of overwhelming for a lot of people. How do you present the data? What about all the data AI is generating? That's the next level of all our statistical trends. It's accelerating so fast. Everything will have something to do with AI in the next year and a half.
Matties: I agree. Kaal, what is your view of AI?
Glazier: Maybe I just have a deeper sense of humor, but sometimes when I see those pictures purely generated by AI, I notice that somebody has six fingers or an extra leg. So, there is still that reliability concern. You don't want to be running too many experimental programs with live military-grade products; you don't risk your quality with that. That being said, there are proven AI tools that you can rely on, and they are getting much better. I know our machines provide the data so we can accurately track and supply the data to AI programs and help customers expand their AI programs.
Matties: The AI is in the data collection and interpreting. We will be able to really tighten up the parameters of the manufacturing process. IPS is doing this sort of stuff already.
Houchin: Yes. We are committed to helping our customers stay as competitive as they can be.
Matties: That's great. It’s an exciting future. Well, I certainly thank you for your time and insight.
Houchin: Thank you.
This interview originally appeared in the February 2024 issue of PCB007 Magazine. Watch for part 2 in an upcoming issue.
Testimonial
"The I-Connect007 team is outstanding—kind, responsive, and a true marketing partner. Their design team created fresh, eye-catching ads, and their editorial support polished our content to let our brand shine. Thank you all! "
Sweeney Ng - CEE PCBSuggested Items
Advint Incorporated Brings Artificial Intelligence to Electroplating Training
09/11/2025 | Advint IncorporatedAdvint Incorporated is introducing a new dimension to its electroplating training programs: the integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI). This initiative reflects the company’s commitment to providing PCB fabricators and manufacturers in the USA and Canada with training that is practical, forward-looking, and directly relevant to today’s production challenges.
IPS, SEL Raise the Bar for ENIG Automation in North America
09/11/2025 | Mike Brask, IPSIPS has installed a state-of-the-art automated ENIG plating line at Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories’ PCB facility in Moscow, Idaho. The 81-foot, fully enclosed line sets a new standard for automation, safety, and efficiency in North American PCB manufacturing and represents one of the largest fully enclosed final finish lines in operation.
The Right Approach: Get Ready for ISO 9001 Version 6
09/10/2025 | Steve Williams -- Column: The Right ApproachWe are well past the normal five to seven years that a new revision of the ISO 9001 international quality standard gets released. It may be finished toward the end of 2025, with implementation starting in 2026, and there will be as many significant changes as we saw in the current 2015 version.
I-Connect007 Launches New Podcast Series on Ultra High Density Interconnect (UHDI)
09/12/2025 | I-Connect007I-Connect007 is excited to announce the debut of its latest On the Line With... podcast series, which shines a spotlight on one of the most important emerging innovations in electronics manufacturing: Ultra-High-Density Interconnect (UHDI).
Global Citizenship: Together for a Perfect PCB Solution
09/10/2025 | Tom Yang -- Column: Global CitizenshipIf there’s one thing we’ve learned in the past few decades of electronics evolution, it’s that no region has a monopoly on excellence. Whether it’s materials science breakthroughs in Europe, manufacturing efficiencies in China, or design innovations in Silicon Valley, the PCB industry thrives on collaboration.