What is IPC Compliance? |
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duchess
New User Joined: 11 Oct 2012 Status: Offline Points: 2 |
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Posted: 29 Sep 2017 at 1:19pm |
Library Expert is very customizable as is the IPC Wizard in Altium Designer.
How do we know a footprint is still "IPC Compliant" after we have customized just about every aspect of the footprint? What is it specifically that makes it IPC Compliant?
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Tom H
Admin Group Joined: 05 Jan 2012 Location: San Diego, CA Status: Offline Points: 5719 |
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I think the most important thing is that your footprints be acceptable to your assembly process.
The assembly guidelines originate in the IPC-J-STD-001 standard for solder joint acceptability. The IPC Land Pattern consists of pad size and spacing and all other customization for Drafting Outlines and other preference options are not defined by IPC. However, there are fabrication guidelines that also need to be met, such as silkscreen legend on solder pads is not a good thing, but it's not mentioned in any IPC standards. |
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Tom H
Admin Group Joined: 05 Jan 2012 Location: San Diego, CA Status: Offline Points: 5719 |
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IPC-A-610 for PCB fabrication and IPC-J-STD-001 for assembly acceptance use 3 classes to define solder joint goal
acceptability for various electronic products. CLASS 1 –
General Electronic Products Includes products suitable for applications where the major
requirement is function of the completed assembly. Toys CLASS 2 –
Dedicated Service Electronic Products Includes products where continued performance and extended
life is required, and for which uninterrupted service is desired but not
critical. Typically, the end-use environment would not cause failures.
Computers & Phones CLASS 3 –
High Performance Electronic Products Includes products where continued high performance or performance-on-demand is critical, equipment downtime cannot be tolerated, end-use environment may be uncommonly harsh, and the equipment must function when required, such as life support or other critical systems. Military & Medical The J-STD-001 and the 610 standards are broken down into these definitions: N = No requirement has been
established for this Class A = Acceptable P = Process Indicator D = Defect Examples: [A1P2D3] is Acceptable Class 1,
Process Indicator Class 2 and Defect Class 3 [N1D2D3] is Requirement Not Establish
Class 1, Defect Classes 2 and 3 [A1A2D3] is Acceptable Classes 1 and
2, Defect Class 3 [D1D2D3] is Defect for all Classes A defect for a Class 1 product means that the characteristic is also a defect for Class 2 and 3. A defect for a Class 2 product means that the characteristic is also a defect for a Class 3 product, but may not be a defect for a Class 1 product where less demanding criteria may apply. Defect = Non-conformance to the requirements of this standard or other risk factors as identified by the manufacturer.
Process Indicator = A detectable
anomaly, other than a defect, that is attributable to variation in material,
equipment operation, workmanship or processes. For additional information about how IPC compliance affects Footprint Land Patterns in Library Expert and Altium Designer read these posts: |
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