7 Common Mistakes With Gerber Files |
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frankicic
New User Joined: 17 Dec 2013 Location: uk Status: Offline Points: 2 |
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Posted: 02 Jul 2014 at 7:56pm |
Creating Gerber files that accurately
reflect what you want manufactured is a challenge no matter how long you have
been a pcb designer. However, by learning from others and avoiding the most
common mistakes, you can speed up the turnaround time, reduce the chance of
orders placed on hold, and complete your projects faster. The following list
reviews the top seven most common mistakes made with Gerber files and how you
can avoid them.
Your Gerber files specify what to do and where. Your aperture list specifies
what tool to use. A single comprehensive aperture list for all layers should be
sent with your Gerber files, rather than a separate aperture list for each
layer. Please note: An aperture list does not need to be sent with 274X format
files. If you send 274D format, we use your aperture list in combination with
your Gerber files to create your artwork. Excellon drill files are used to determine what size holes to drill and where.
Plated and non-plated holes need to be included in one drill file, with plated
and non-plated holes having different tool numbers. A tool list is used in combination with your excellon drill file to create your
drill. Your drill file specifies where to place the holes. Your tool list
specifies what tool to use. A tool list should be embedded in your excellon
drill file or sent as a separate text file. Using a tool list provided on a
fabrication drawing is not preferable, as it eliminates many of the automatic
verifications and makes data entry errors far more likely. Believe it or not, many times people submit orders and forget to attach their
gerber files. An annular ring is the donut (“annulus”) created when your drill pierces a
copper layer. It is defined as the radius of this donut. For example, a .030”
pad with an .020” hole would have a .005” annular ring. This is required to
allow for complete plating on vias, as well as solder ability on component
holes. Many times people do not allow for the proper annular ring requirements.
Copper spacing is the minimum air gap between any two adjacent copper features.
Trace width is the minimum width of a copper feature, usually traces. Inner clearance is the minimum distance from the edge of a hole to any
adjacent, unconnected, inner layer copper. Sufficient inner clearances help
ensure that your drill does not cause shorts to your inner copper layers. This
is important for both plated and non-plated holes, as non-plated holes may
either cut into an adjacent trace or cause shorts during assembly. |
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bac_a_sable
New User Joined: 04 Nov 2014 Status: Offline Points: 1 |
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I desagree with one point: the use of english unit.
You cans always convert inch to millimeters; convert milimmeters to ich will produce roundoff accuracie problems. Read IPC-2221B paragraph 1.3.1 about this |
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jameshead
Expert User Joined: 20 Mar 2012 Location: Oxfordshire, UK Status: Offline Points: 576 |
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This looks like a list copied and pasted from the early nineties. Look at point 1, who uses aperture tables and RS-274D these days? I guess it covers old designs.
It's totally out of date with regard to units. I was a CAM Engineer for a high technology PCB Fabricator for two years after leaving university and we didn't care if customers provided data in imperial or metric. The CAM software would handle both easily. At this PCB fabricator the CNC drill machines used metric sized drill bits but photo tools were worked on in the CAM system in imperial. A large number of customers provided gerber data in imperial (2.3 or 2.4 inch format) and excellon drill data in metric ( 3.3 mm format) together with a drawing from a mechanical cad system that used metric. Sure the drill hits didn't always tie up with the pad centres, and the PCB profile from the gerber didn't tie up with the mechanical drawing, but we dealt with this. We had built in tools in the CAM software to snap drill hits into pad centres and we always created the rout program from the metric drawing. Nowadays things are different, particulary as Mechanical Design has progressed and the improved integration between the PCB Design and Mechanical design. My guidence would be to pick one system and stick with that throughout the design for both PCB Design and Mechanical design, and make sure your outputs are in the same system used for design. My preference is for metric everywhere and I agree with bac_a_sable's comments to a point, although converting thou (MIL for American readers) to metric mm will produce rounding errors if you don't take account of the resolution. For example 1 thou equates to 0.0254 mm, and 2 thou equates to 0.0508 mm, but if you are using an 3.3 format metric output then you've lost the 0.0004 or 0.0008 at the end of these values so you could still end up with (small) rounding errors in your design. |
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CHENONN
New User Joined: 30 Jul 2015 Status: Offline Points: 3 |
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I have a question,sometimes I can not open the gerber file which my customer send to me,I try to open it,but there is nothing on the desk,I usually use the CAM350 10.1/9.5 software.
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jameshead
Expert User Joined: 20 Mar 2012 Location: Oxfordshire, UK Status: Offline Points: 576 |
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The first thing to check is to see if it is actually a Gerber file at all by opening it in a text editor.
Users often send all sorts of files together with Gerber and excellon data such as GenCAD and original Binary CAD data so if you have a modern Gerber viewer like GC-Prevue or CAM350 and it's not recognising it as a Gerber file, odd on, it isn't. |
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Matthew Lamkin
Advanced User Joined: 02 Oct 2012 Status: Offline Points: 284 |
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Chenonn, if you have CAM350 then there is a forum on the downstream site where you may obtain assistance.
Confirming that they are actually Gerber files is essential, opening them in Notepad can show this. Checking that you have the correct format also helps load it in - is it 2.3 or 4.5 etc? Often loading in a Gerber file when the resolution is not set correctly can result in a mess on screen or everything in a corner etc. |
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