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The Key to First-pass Success in PCB Design
April 10, 2025 | Gerry Partida, Summit InterconnectEstimated reading time: 1 minute

In the dynamic world of PCB manufacturing, achieving first-pass success hinges on more than just cutting-edge equipment and skilled teams. At Summit Interconnect, we have seen countless successful launches of advanced HDI designs that can be traced directly to engagement between designers and fabricators early in the design phase.
Unfortunately, collaboration in the PCB industry often begins only after problems arise—such as field failures, assembly fallout, or low fabrication yields. This reactive approach is the wrong starting point for collaboration.
When issues surface late in the design cycle or during production, the costs of fixing them escalate exponentially. Redesigns, delays, and rework add unnecessary complexity and expense, while product reliability and time-to-market suffer. To avoid these challenges, collaboration needs to occur earlier in the design cycle, where issues can be proactively addressed.
Bridging the Knowledge Gap
PCB designers often focus on functionality, performance, and compliance with end-use requirements. Meanwhile, fabricators look at manufacturability, process efficiency, and cost optimization. Proactive collaboration between the OEM and the manufacturer ensures that requirements and capabilities are aligned from the outset, minimizing potential conflicts between design intent and fabrication results.
To read this entire article, which appeared in the March 2025 issue of Design007 Magazine, click here.
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Digital Twin Concept in Copper Electroplating Process Performance
07/11/2025 | Aga Franczak, Robrecht Belis, Elsyca N.V.PCB manufacturing involves transforming a design into a physical board while meeting specific requirements. Understanding these design specifications is crucial, as they directly impact the PCB's fabrication process, performance, and yield rate. One key design specification is copper thieving—the addition of “dummy” pads across the surface that are plated along with the features designed on the outer layers. The purpose of the process is to provide a uniform distribution of copper across the outer layers to make the plating current density and plating in the holes more uniform.
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Showing Some Constraint: Design007 Magazine July 2025
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Elementary, Mr. Watson: Rein in Your Design Constraints
07/10/2025 | John Watson -- Column: Elementary, Mr. WatsonI remember the long hours spent at the light table, carefully laying down black tape to shape each trace, cutting and aligning pads with surgical precision on sheets of Mylar. I often went home with nicks on my fingers from the X-Acto knives and bits of tape all over me. It was as much an art form as it was an engineering task—tactile and methodical, requiring the patience of a sculptor. A lot has changed in PCB design over the years.
TTCI Joins Printed Circuit Engineering Association to Strengthen Design-to-Test Collaboration and Workforce Development
07/09/2025 | The Test Connection Inc.The Test Connection Inc. (TTCI), a leading provider of electronic test and manufacturing solutions, is proud to announce its membership in the Printed Circuit Engineering Association (PCEA), further expanding the company’s efforts to support cross-functional collaboration, industry standards, and technical education in the printed circuit design and manufacturing community.