sci4me wrote:
The inner layers are 'cut up' a fair bit by vias and the odd through hole, but generally, it's still a _mostly_ continuous plane.
I am unsure from this response that I clearly communicated my thoughts on this in my post above, so let me try to be more explicit. Looking at the
pictures I linked is likely to be helpful with this.
From the point of view of signal returns, the ground path being a
plane is of no importance at all. The key desire is that the return path exactly follows the source path. When laying out a board, a continuous plane happens to be a (much) easier way to achieve this than creating an individual ground return trace underneath each signal trace, but the effect is the same either way, since with a fully continuous ground plane the return path will always follow the source path as closely as it can.
Whether through-holes and vias have any effect on this depends on their location and what they interrupt. If you have a huge hole cut out in the centre of the board, that's absolutely fine, since no traces are crossing it on any layers. On the other hand, a single narrow trace cutting across the ground plane with signal traces crossing it (as in the second image in my link above) can result in a significantly different return path, which will degrade signal integrity.
(As usual, this just reflects my current non-expert understanding of this, based on what research curiosity has prompted me to pursue. Corrections from those more knowledgable are always welcome.)
There are other considerations with boards with more than two layers, such as the bypass capacitance one can gain by placing ground and power planes adjacent and close. I've not delved into this much, and it gets complex quickly (e.g., I think that layers 2 and 3 are much further apart than 1 and 2 or 3 and 4, greatly reducing that bypass capacitance, and at least one authority I've read says that the ground and power planes are generally better on the outside layers rather than the inside ones), so I'm not really bringing that in here.
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To be fair though, my last board, a 2-layer THT board, works (mostly) just fine with pours so *shrugs*
Yeah, as a hobbyist this is why I don't get too hung up on this kind of stuff. Just because signal integrity is heavily degraded doesn't mean the thing won't actually work, particularly at the lowish speeds we hobbyists use. My research and reading on this is really more due to personal interest than trying to resolve actual problems I've encountered.
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I guess I'd hope that this would mitigate any harm the pours might be causing.
As with the ground plane vs. ground traces thing above, it might be utterly unrelated and irrelevant. The key here, too, would be understanding what various separate things the ground plane is achieving, rather than just leaving it "ground plane good" without understanding why (and when it isn't good).