Cadence Ebooks

40 PCB Design Tips Every Designer Should Know

Issue link: https://resources.pcb.cadence.com/i/1541046

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 79 of 82

39. Reviewing Design for Manufacturability (DFM) and Assembly Constraints How To Implement 1. Obtain and review your fabricator's and assembler's capability documents: f Collect the latest specs for minimum trace/space, via sizes, annular ring, component spacing, copper-to-edge, stencil/paste specs, component orientation, and board thickness constraints. f Check guidelines for double-sided assembly, fine-pitch/ BGA handling, selective wave solder, and process-specific rules. 2. Apply DFM rules in your CAD tool and constraint manager: f Set up all manufacturability constraints: part-to-part, part-to-board edge, via and trace rules, minimum mask/ paste openings, component keepouts for automated assembly and inspection, and fiducial requirements for pick-and-place and AOI. f Use part orientation standards to optimize pick-and-place sequencing and reflow profile. 3. Use automated DFM checks and validation tools: f Run built-in or third-party DFM checks to flag violations: minimum feature size, solder mask slivers, insufficient paste, component spacing, polarity errors, and fiducial placement. f Pay special attention to fine-pitch parts, dense clusters, and "hybrid" assembly zones (mix of SMD, TH, BGA, connectors). 4. Review component orientation, accessibility, and handling: f Place components with consistent orientation (e.g., pin 1 all in the same direction) where possible for assembly efficiency. f Ensure no parts are shadowed by taller components or located under mechanical constraints (heatsinks, enclosures) that block pick-and-place heads or inspection cameras. f Avoid placing fragile parts (crystals, large electrolytics) at the board edge or near breakaway tabs. 5. Check for cleaning, rework, and test accessibility: f Maintain clearances for cleaning under low-profile parts or BGAs if the board will be washed. f Ensure there is probe access to all required test points. f Provide rework space around BGAs, FPGAs, and high-pin-count ICs as recommended by your assembler. 6. Engage with your CM (contract manufacturer) for feedback: f Submit design for DFM/DFT (Design for Test) review before final release. f Address feedback quickly; iterate as needed to resolve manufacturability or assembly risks. Common Pitfalls, Their Impact, and How to Avoid Them Common Pitfall How to Avoid it Ignoring CM guide- lines or assembly constraints Leads to rejected builds, costly rework, or "design-locked" issues – Incorporate CM assembly and design rules in your DRC/DFM checks. Inadequate spacing for high-density or tall parts Causes pick-and-place or soldering problems, high defect rates – Set minimum clearance rules. Missing DFM check for new/complex parts New packages or process flows can require special handling – Perform a DFM review with your CM or update your design rules library. Not planning for test, cleaning, or rework Makes future servicing difficult or impossible – Incorporate test features from the start and provide adequate component spacing.

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

view archives of Cadence Ebooks - 40 PCB Design Tips Every Designer Should Know