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Testing Todd: Flying Probe - Indirect Testing vs. Military
Introduction
The use of flying probe testers has become increasingly popular in recent times, mainly due to the affordability of the equipment and also the reduced cost of testing, as no dedicated or “bed of nails” fixture is required. When using flying probes to test military product, one must be diligent to make sure the test method is allowable. Grid test machines provide full net to net testing for isolation of all nets and full continuity of individual nets. This is referred to as full simultaneous test. When a flying probe is used there are two modes of operation: Direct or indirect.
Direct Testing
When a direct test is used the machine will test every board in resistance mode, meaning that every net will be resistively tested for both opens and shorts. Each board will take the same time to test. When the isolation (shorts) test is performed, nets will be tested using an adjacency window. This is different than a bed of nails whereby which each net is tested simultaneously to all other nets using the voltage and isolation resistance thresholds. With a flying probe only nets within the adjacency window are tested to others. Industry accepted practice for this adjacency window is 0.050” (1.27 mm). Also to be considered is the type of adjacency used. Standard practice is X,Y adjacency or “line of sight,” meaning only on the same layer. If Z-axis adjacency is added, the adjacency window becomes three-dimensional and isolation testing is done not only on the same layer, but within the adjacency window on layers above and below.Read the full column here.Editor's Note: This column originally appeared in the June 2014 issue of The PCB Magazine.
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