Why
is IPC-7351C not released yet?
During
the creation of the first draft, the main committee met face to face for 3-days
several times a year and large sections of the draft were worked on by
individual members and sent to IPC for update. It
wasn’t until the main draft was completed
that the sub-committee was invited to webcasts to review the new standard.
When
IPC-7351 was first drafted, there was a main committee of dedicated people:
Dieter
Bergman (IPC Leader in Standards
Technology) –
Deceased
Vern Solberg (Technical
Consultant
Specializing
in
SMT) –
Left the Committee
Gary Ferrari (Ex Vice Chairman) –
Left the Committee
Rainer
Taube (FED Director of
Standardization) –
Left the Committee
John Perry (IPC Liaison) – Left the Committee
Karen
McConnell (Current Chairman) – In the process of retiring
Tom Hausherr (President & CEO of PCB
Libraries, Inc.) –
Still on the 1-13 Land pattern Committee since 1999
Tom,
Rainer and Dieter met at IPC headquarters the week of July 14, 2014 for 3 days.
We decided to rewrite 7351C into a new updated format because prior
updates to IPC-7351 were simply added to the end and Dieter wanted a fresh new
rewrite that organized all the component families into special groups according
to pin quantity. We wanted to add color to all the graphic images because all
previous versions were printed in Black & White. Update the naming
convention to include Thermal Pad Sizes and Terminal Lead Sizes which impacted
the resulting land pattern. We wanted to add the Zero Orientation “Pin 1 Lower
Left” to match the original IPC-SM-782 land pattern standard and the new IEC 61188-7
standard for Pin 1 location. Introduce Rounded Rectangle pad shape and add
additional component families. All of these issues were discussed and
organized into an outline that clearly described the work that was required for
the 7351C rewrite.
Tom left IPC on Thursday July 17, 2014 with the framework
and a to do list from Dieter Bergman. Less than one week later, Dieter Bergman
passed away on Wednesday July 23, 2014. Using Dieter’s instructions, Tom went
to work on 7351C and spent over 1,000 hours to create the original 109-page
7351C draft that was submitted to IPC in June 2015. The sub-committee then met
via 1-hour webcasts. The original comments were to change some images and
content and Tom went back to the draft for another 6 months to make the updates
proposed by the sub-committee. Tom submitted draft 2 of 7351C in May 2016 to
IPC. The sub-committee reconvened for 1-hour webcasts for the next 3 years. A
recent decision by IPC was made to scrap Tom and Dieter’s 7351C
draft and start over from scratch using the IPC-7351B as the base starting
point.
A revision to an
IPC standard must be drafted, reviewed and approved by
a base group of the sub-committee who attends the webcast meetings. Then the
final draft is sent out to the entire sub-committee to vote on the revision
details. All changes are highlighted so the sub-committee knows all the data
that was updated. Since the main sub-committee group does not participate
in the regular webcasts, when the final draft goes out, it’s the first time
they have seen it. They are given 30 days to vote on the changes. During the
voting process, every member has
the opportunity to
question the changes and submit alternate changes. The draft then goes back to
the base sub-committee to address all the questions and additional changes.
After the base subcommittee adds the additional
comments
and recommendations to the standard, a new final draft is created and sent back out for another
30-day committee vote. Normally, this final draft gets approved and then the
draft is sent to a typesetter to officially organize the draft into a document
that is ready to publish. This process can take up to 3 months or longer
depending on the scope of the changes.
Basically,
it takes almost a half year to go to publication after the first draft is sent
to a sub-committee vote. The IPC-7351C draft is still in committee and sending
it out for vote is not on the calendar schedule yet.
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