Handbook of Printed Circuit Manufacturing [electronic resource] / by Raymond H. Clark.

Erişim Adresi
ISBN
9789401170123
Dil Kodu
İngilizce
Yer Numarası
DK/14136
Basım Bildirimi
1st ed. 1985.
Yayın Bilgisi
Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 1985.
Fiziksel Niteleme
XIX, 620 p. online resource.
İçindekiler Notu
Section 1. Design and Manufacture of Printed Circuits -- 1. How Printed Circuit Boards Are Manufactured: Processes and Materials -- 2. Computer Aided Design and Design Automation -- 3. Digital Printed Circuit Design -- Section 2. Planning, Document Control, and Quality -- 4. Definitions -- 5. Planning -- 6. Quality Assurance Program -- 7. Quality Assurance Manual -- Section 3. Imaging and Artwork -- 8. Artwork Processing -- 9. Artwork Registration Systems for Dry Film Imaging -- 10. Dry Film Imaging -- 11. Screen Printing -- Section 4. N/C Processing -- 12. Numerical Controlled Drilling and Routing -- 12A. Drilling Procedures -- Section 5. Plating and Other Wet Processes -- 13. Metal Thickness Determination -- 14. Amperage Determination -- 15. The Electroless Copper Process 300 Detecting Problems -- 16. Pattern Plating: Copper, Tin-Lead, and Other Metals -- 17. Contact Finger Plating -- 18. Resist Stripping -- 19. Etching -- 20. Tin-Lead Fusing -- Section 6. Multilayer Printed Circuits -- 21. Multilayer Processing -- 22. Etchback and Smear Removal -- Section 7. Process Control -- 23. The Laboratory -- Section 8. The Marketing Program -- 24. Sales Tools -- 25. What Sales People Should Know About Printed Circuits -- Appendix A: Yield Tracking: A Tool for Productivity -- Appendix B: CAD: Swift, Precise, Infinitely Repeatable, but Never Creative -- Appendix C: Soldermask Over Bare Copper: Alternatives and Manufacturing Techniques -- Appendix D: Control and Operation of Printed Circuit Plating Baths with the Hull Cell -- Appendix E: Troubleshooting the IR Fusing Process -- Appendix F: Preserving Solderability with Solder Coatings -- Appendix G: Screen Printing Is the Answer -- Appendix H: Forecasting Waste Treatment Requirements -- Appendix I: Wave Soldering of Discrete Chip Components.
Özet, vb.
Of all the components that go into electronic equipment, the printed circuit probably requires more manufacturing operations-each of which must be per­ formed by a skilled person-than any other. As a shift supervisor early in my printed circuit career, I had to hire and train personnel for all job functions. The amount of responsibility delegated to my subordinates depended strictly on how well I had been able to train them. Training people can be a trying experience and is always a time-consuming one. It behooved me to help my workers obtain the highest degree of job under­ standing and skill that they and I were capable of. One hindrance to effective teaching is poor continuity of thought, for example, having to say to a trainee, "Wait a minute; forget what I just told you. We have to go back and do some­ thing else first. " It was in trying to avoid pitfalls such as this that I undertook a detailed examination of the processes involved, what I thought each trainee had to know, and what questions they would most frequently ask. From this analysis I developed the various process procedures. Only after I had done so was I able to train effectively and with the confidence that I was doing the best possible job. Answers had to be at hand for all of their questions and in what­ ever detail they needed to know.
Konu
Social sciences.
Humanities.
Humanities and Social Sciences.