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| Tue, 22 Oct 2019 13:29:31 -0700 (PDT) | |
| Date: | Tue, 22 Oct 2019 20:29:10 +0000 |
| From: | "John L. Males (jlmales AT gmail DOT com) [via geda-help AT delorie DOT com]" <geda-help AT delorie DOT com> |
| To: | geda-help AT delorie DOT com |
| Subject: | Re: [geda-help] Question: New User - How To Create Very Simple |
| Unique PCB With No Components | |
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Hello Peter,
Thank you for your reply and information.
I have follow up questions and/or comments and related points:
The Pin statement in the 3x6 hole part I created as one
example was:
Pin(300 350 125 90 "101" 0x01)
Your great example to make it a pure hole with no connection
attribute was:
Pin[0 0 3.6mm 0.4mm 3.4mm 3.2mm "" "1" "hole"]
If there a difference in context or meaning of the Pin
statement when using round brackets vs square brackets?
There is a difference in the number of items I used from the
connector part I used as basis of my pin statement. Is this
related to the type of brackets used as asked just above?
Am I correct to assume the first two zeros you used are still
for the pin location?
If one does not use the "mm" units suffix in your example will
that mean the default units is mils? Can one explicitly state
mils a a unit of measure?
One aspect I learned was the use of 0x101 in the format of the
Pin statement created a square hole and graphic inside that
collectively indicate pin 1 of the connector. Is this the same
parameter in the round brackets syntax I deduced from a
connector part that can indicate hole?
The second and third value in the round bracket Pin syntax I
deduced from the connector part were outside and inside
diameter.
The first 4 values of the round bracket Pin syntax I used are
in mils as I discovered.
I am assuming the 5th value in the round bracket values I used
is some sort of comment or reference point that I do not see in
the PCB nor gerbers I created as test.
To clarify the need for a third layer to allow the signal
traces from each of the copper sides is not longer a
requirement for various reasons. I was aware of 1, 2, 4 layer
boards and if I was to use a third layer it would of been for
this purpose.
Board thickness as you know will affect the capacitance
between the upper and lower layer as well as the dielectric of
the material between the copper sides. The current
indications I have states the boards have a capacitance between
27pF to 39pF. To my way of thinking for the application at
hand and related circuits that is a bit wide not just in
absolute terms, but on tolerance basis. I believe the wide
tolerance is due to using FR4 boards. I think it was Chad that
mentioned Polyimide board that my sense was would have smaller
capacitance tolerances including from temperature delta point
of view. A tighter absolute capacitance tolerance as well as
less variation due to temperature delta change are very much
both desirable compared to what has been suggested is wider on
both points for FR4.
Thickness is also a factor because the gap this sensor board
sits between is about 0.125". So a board that is also
dimensionally stable is important as well. The fixtures the
board is attached to are of a warp less design.
I will keep in mind and will research different types of board
materials for dimension stability and reduce dielectric
constants variation.
The board does not move, but maybe the metal it is mounted to
might pinch the solder mask that would cause unwanted low
voltage short that wold render the sensor board useless as well
as the application. I had been considering before your comment
about the solder mask if running a trace or making a small gap
about a via at edge of the copper planes to transition the
lower connection to upper side of board that is not in contact
with metal fixture to then run the trace top side to the solder
pad. This dovetails with your comment about allowing at
least 0.5mm space of copper from edge of board.
Is it possible to make a copper area a part? If so like the
vent holes part I can make the copper area such that there is
at least a 0.5mm space from the edge of the board. Why is it
important to provide at least a 0.5mm space of copper from side
of the board? I ask to learn, not question the suggestion or
best practices aspect of the point. the ask if can make the
copper area a part assumes the vent holes part will do as I see
so far. If not could one edit the text file of the board with
the copper sides on it manually to effect the at least 0.5mm
clearance of copper from the edge of the board. Do this via
the GUI is challenge as one would have to zoom the board so
much it may make trying to effect the clearance from the edge
challenging or not practical from a GUI point of view.
I like your suggestion of using oshpark.com to test things like
fit to the mounting fixture the board will be. I could test
the capacitance as well of the board from oshpark.com and it
would allow me to compare the oshpark.com board to high end
boards for capacitance, capacitance variation due to dielectric,
and variation due to temperature delta change.
I have skipped questions I have of the "Element" statement and
"ElementLine" for now until I have the "Pin" statement
questions I asked above sorted out that I understand for my
needs.
John L. Males
Toronto, Ontario
Canada
22 October 2019 16:29 -0400 EDT
================================================================
2019-10-22 19:30:27+0000-UTC Time: 1571772627 PC/System time
22 Oct 19:30:27 ntpdate[50905]: ntpdate 4.2.8p12-a (1)
22 Oct 19:30:42 ntpdate[52514]: step time server 206.108.0.132
offset 0.008908 sec
FreeBSD 11.3-STABLE FreeBSD 11.3-STABLE #0 r349903: Thu Jul 11
16:13:47 UTC 2019
root AT releng2 DOT nyi DOT freebsd DOT org:/usr/obj/usr/src/sys/GENERIC
(Work in progress alternative to Linux Kernel of its own right,
Debian, and
other Linux based Kernel distributions determined.)
Intel(R) Core(TM) i3-2367M CPU @ 1.40GHz
Intel(R) Core(TM) i3-2367M CPU @ 1.40GHz (1396.86-MHz K8-class
CPU) Intel(R) Core(TM) i3-2367M CPU @ 1.40GHz (1396.86-MHz
K8-class CPU) Intel(R) Core(TM) i3-2367M CPU @ 1.40GHz
(1396.86-MHz K8-class CPU) Intel(R) Core(TM) i3-2367M CPU @
1.40GHz (1396.86-MHz K8-class CPU) Intel(R) Core(TM) i3-2367M
CPU @ 1.40GHz (1396.86-MHz K8-class CPU)
dev.cpu.0.temperature: 67.0C
dev.cpu.1.temperature: 68.0C
dev.cpu.2.temperature: 63.0C
dev.cpu.3.temperature: 63.0C
hw.acpi.thermal.tz0.temperature: 75.1C
vmstat -s:
67397552 cpu context switches
1336007 device interrupts
307073 software interrupts
12626753 traps
247567285 system calls
27 kernel threads created
2759 fork() calls
521 vfork() calls
0 rfork() calls
0 swap pager pageins
0 swap pager pages paged in
0 swap pager pageouts
0 swap pager pages paged out
6660 vnode pager pageins
82253 vnode pager pages paged in
189 vnode pager pageouts
3143 vnode pager pages paged out
0 page daemon wakeups
6065840 pages examined by the page daemon
0 clean page reclamation shortfalls
0 pages reactivated by the page daemon
143753 copy-on-write faults
730 copy-on-write optimized faults
9183392 zero fill pages zeroed
0 zero fill pages prezeroed
35 intransit blocking page faults
12678412 total VM faults taken
9235 page faults requiring I/O
0 pages affected by kernel thread creation
130627 pages affected by fork()
18364 pages affected by vfork()
0 pages affected by rfork()
11879687 pages freed
0 pages freed by daemon
3100745 pages freed by exiting processes
269736 pages active
553198 pages inactive
23882 pages in the laundry queue
201072 pages wired down
959843 pages free
4096 bytes per page
2212682 total name lookups
cache hits (92% pos + 3% neg) system 0% per-directory
deletions 0%, falsehits 0%, toolong 0%
Boot time : 1571762712
procs memory page disks
faults cpu0 cpu1 cpu2 cpu3 r b w avm
fre flt re pi po fr sr ad0 pa0 in sy cs us sy
id us sy id us sy id us sy id 0 0 0 27854872 3839304 1277 0
1 0 1196 611 0 0 135 24929 6787 15 6 80 15 5 80 15
5 80 15 5 80
memory info:
real memory = 8589934592 (8192 MB)
avail memory = 8166465536 (7788 MB)
last pid: 57742; load averages: 0.45, 0.45, 0.54 up
0+02:45:31 19:30:43 57 processes: 2 running, 55 sleeping
Mem: 1054M Active, 2161M Inact, 93M Laundry, 786M Wired, 316M
Buf, 3748M Free Swap: 48G Total, 48G Free
hw.physmem: 8463925248
hw.usermem: 7640150016
hw.realmem: 8589934592
total used free shared
buffers cached Mem: 8030732 1978872
6051860 0 0 0 Swap:
50331644 0 50331644
swapinfo:
Device 1K-blocks Used Avail Capacity
/dev/ada0s1b 50331644 0 50331644 0%
vmstat:
procs memory page disks
faults cpu r b w avm fre flt re pi po
fr sr ad0 pa0 in sy cs us sy id 0 0 0 27855896
3838880 1277 0 1 0 1197 611 0 0 135 24930 6787
15 5 80
Message replied to:
Date: Tue, 22 Oct 2019 17:01:55 +0000
From: "Peter Stuge (peter AT stuge DOT se) [via
geda-help AT delorie DOT com]" <geda-help AT delorie DOT com> To: "John L.
Males \(jlmales AT gmail DOT com\) \[via geda-help AT delorie DOT com\]"
<geda-help AT delorie DOT com> Subject: Re: [geda-help] Question: New
User - How To Create Very Simple Unique PCB With No Components
> John L. Males (jlmales AT gmail DOT com) [via geda-help AT delorie DOT com]
> wrote:
> > Is the "Pin" attribute of the part "Element" a Via or just a
> > pin with hole for the layer the pin is assigned to?
>
> A Pin inside an Element is on one hand a connection point for
> one part in the netlist (irrelevant for your board) and on
> another hand a drilled hole through all layers and a copper
> ring on all layers.
>
> This is far more than you need. By adding the "hole" flag to
> the Pin you can indicate that this Pin is actually primarily
> a hole. Here's a footprint that I've created for a single M3
> mounting hole:
>
> Element[0x00000000 "M3 mount" "" "" 0 0 -1mm -1mm 0 100 ""]
> (
> Pin[0 0 3.6mm 0.4mm 3.4mm 3.2mm "" "1" "hole"]
> )
>
> 3.2mm is the drill diameter. What are the 3.6, 0.4 and 3.4
> measurements?
>
> 3.6mm is Thickness - the outer diameter of the copper ring,
> were this Pin not a hole. Being a hole, no copper ring is
> generated.
>
> 0.4mm is Clearance - add this to Thickness above to get the
> diameter of the generated copper removal around the center of
> the hole. This applies equally to holes (with "hole" flag; no
> copper) and pins (without "hole" flag).
>
> 3.4mm is Mask - diameter of the generated circular opening of
> the solder mask around the center of the hole. Applies to
> holes and pins.
>
>
> > For example I have created a part that is just the set of
> > holes using the "Pin" attribute of the part "Element" so
> > the set of 6x3 holes is spaced exactly as needed and with a
> > home reference point.
>
> That's a great solution.
>
>
> Some general points:
>
> I've not seen any PCB fab offer 3-layer boards. You can get
> 1, 2 or 4. You'll do fine with 2.
>
> Please mind that PCB thickness is very much inexact.
> Fiberglass cores (sometimes called prepreg) are built by the
> PCB fab stacking multiple 10-100µm layers to roughly the
> required height. This is a mechanical process which has
> variations - those may be quite significant, depending on
> which capacitance tolerance you require. Expect no less than
> ±100µm thickness tolerance.
>
> Please also do research different dielectric materials. FR4
> is the entry level material, quite a loose weave, exhibiting
> fairly high variation. Many PCBs with strict signal integrity
> requirements can not afford to use FR4, but need a much
> tighter weave in the core, to reduce dielectric constant
> variation significantly. You may or may not need to consider
> this, and may have to work with select, higher-end PCB fabs
> who control more precise processes and offer different core
> materials, again depending on your tolerance requirement.
>
> Remember to leave any area of the PCB which rests against
> metal (on the back if I understood you correctly) free of
> copper, even if you use solder mask. The solder mask is a
> think lacquer and will wear off with friction.
>
> And remember to leave at least 0.5mm to the PCB edge free of
> copper.
>
>
> In North America you could start with ordering PCBs from
> oshpark.com, they do efficient pooling such that you don't
> have to pay much per board. If you have the time this means
> you can do a test run or two of just a few boards, on one
> hand to practice the process with your software before
> contacting a higher-end fab, on another hand to get some
> actual boards to test functionally.
>
>
>
> Kind regards
>
> //Peter
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