Stephen Chavez: Breaking the Design Data Bottleneck
December 3, 2018 | Andy Shaughnessy, Design007 MagazineEstimated reading time: 3 minutes

When we started planning this issue on design data, I knew we’d have to speak with PCB designer and EPTAC design instructor Steph Chavez. In this interview, he explains some of the biggest issues related to design data, and offers some ways forward.
Andy Shaughnessy: Steph, can you tell us about your background? Then, we'll talk about what you are seeing and hearing regarding PCB design as a design instructor for EPTAC Corporation.
Steph Chavez: Sure. I hold a seat on the global IPC Designers Council (DC) Executive Board. I am my local area’s IPC DC chapter president in Phoenix. I have about 28 years of experience in the industry. I've spent the last 15 years of my career as a lead designer successfully designing a wide spectrum of PCB designs—both simple and complex—including HDI, flex, and rigid-flex. I’ve also led global PCB design teams, which include managing diverse, multicultural teams in multiple time zones. The foundation of my education and leadership stems from my time in service in the U.S. Marine Corps as an avionics technician. Whenever I’m speaking, I always stress that you should have plenty of knowledge resources in your “bag of magic,” so to speak, This includes establishing your professional network, which I believe this is key for your overall success. I-Connect007 is a great resource of knowledge sharing and up-to-date industry content.
Shaughnessy: We appreciate that. We like to publish information that designers can use right away. Speaking of which, one thing everybody was talking about at IPC APEX EXPO 2018 was data. The Design Forum hardly covered anything about how to design a board; it was all about data. You hear from fabricators that 90% of new customers submit design data packages that are incomplete or inaccurate. They don't provide an updated netlist, etc. You said that you've been dealing with a lot of data issues lately. Can you tell us about that?
Chavez: As a designer, when you think about the data you’re presenting or handing off to your suppliers, you should have a basic understanding of IPC standards because that is how you're going to communicate your intent to your fabricator and assembler. At the same time, you need to fully comprehend what you are giving to your suppliers and what you are stating in your fabrication and assembly drawings. Are you correctly stating your fabrication or assembly notes? Do they make sense? Do you have all the required information listed to fabricate your PWB or assemble your PWA successfully? Do you have statements in your drawings that conflict with one another and could cause confusion? Worse yet—and I feel this is the root of the problem—do you understand your company’s documentation details, or are you just “rubber stamping” your documentation because “that’s how it’s always been done?”
These are some of the questions that come to mind when I think about bad data being handed off. Board design construction is key for success and getting the details correct is paramount. Many times, bad data is given because people are not paying attention to the details. Some designers simply don't know what they don't know and pass on bad data.
In my experience, when you get into production runs with a top-tier supplier, they will not change or modify your data without permission. If you send a job over to them with issues, concerns, or missing data, chances are it's going to be put on hold. By the time you receive any feedback that your job has been put on hold, it could be five or more days lost in a schedule before you can address these issues flagged by the supplier. For many companies, that’s a huge negative hit. The sad thing is that this usually stems from something that could have been easily mitigated up front in the beginning stages of your design with the supplier.
To read this entire article, which appeared in the October 2018 issue of Design007 Magazine, click here.
Suggested Items
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.
Meet the Author Podcast: Martyn Gaudion Unpacks the Secrets of High-Speed PCB Design
07/10/2025 | I-Connect007In this special Meet the Author episode of the On the Line with… podcast, Nolan Johnson sits down with Martyn Gaudion, signal integrity expert, managing director of Polar Instruments, and three-time author in I-Connect007’s popular The Printed Circuit Designer’s Guide to... series.
Showing Some Constraint: Design007 Magazine July 2025
07/10/2025 | I-Connect007 Editorial TeamA robust design constraint strategy balances dozens of electrical and manufacturing trade-offs. This month, we focus on design constraints—the requirements, challenges, and best practices for setting up the right constraint strategy.
The Shaughnessy Report: Showing Some Constraint
07/14/2025 | Andy Shaughnessy -- Column: The Shaughnessy ReportWhen we first decided to cover strategies for setting PCB design constraints, one designer we spoke with said, “They’re not really constraints; they’re more like guardrails that prevent your design from going off a cliff.”
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.