GARTHWILSON wrote:
Regarding the trace lengths: Do you plan to put parts on both sides, to get more parts per square inch and hold the trace lengths down?
Yes, that’s the plan. The stackup is not quite fully worked out, but for sure there will be components on both the top and bottom layers. The current thought is to go with a 6 layers, as follows:
Signal Top
— 5 mil prepreg —
GND
— 5 mil core —
Signal V
— ~40 mil prepreg —
Signal H
— 5 mil core —
VCC
— 5 mil prepreg —
Signal Bottom
This would be on a 1.6mm FR4 (7628) PCB, with 8 mil microstrip and 6.5mil stripline traces to yield 50Ω impedances. If the VCC plane becomes too fragmented due to the dual-voltage supply requirement, then it might be necessary to either turn Signal H into a VCC2 plane or go to an 8 layers board. Dr Jefyll has done some great work to confirm the use of VCC as a reference plane in various scenarios, which is great. I will need continued help to finalize the stackup when the time comes (which I suspect will be partially into the layout).
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I asked one of our board manufacturers about blind and buried vias,
IIRC, a blind via perforates the PCB from one surface to the required layers and no further, whereas a buried via does so only from one specific internal layer to another without harming the PCB surfaces at all (hence buried within the PCB). My current plan is to use regular through-hole vias, but I can certainly see how these other variants might become necessary.
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You can also get vias plugged and plated over so you can put them in solder pads without running into problems with silkscreening the solderpaste on; but again it's more cost.
I have a bias towards simple drag soldering, rather than paste and stencils, simply because of familiarity. I’m definitely open to suggestions though so I might come back to this topic when the time comes. One question: is it practical to use solder paste and stencils when there are components on both the top and bottom layers? How do you keep the bottom components from falling off or shifting when heating the boards?
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When you can't put vias under pads, they take more board space. If you're going to solder this by hand, there may be no problem with putting vias in the pads.
Yes, thanks for mentioning it. It may come very handy in this project. (I think Arlet may have made the same suggestion for the C74-6502 but I was too much of a noob to venture it).