Ed Current wrote:
> ...I was hoping someone could help me with the trade offs of plating
> FR4 at higher copper thicknesses.
A few brief notes from the top of my head (although I'm no expert and
would like to read a response from a board fab guru...)
>From my experience, The biggest trade off is etching consistency. If you
have a design where one area is large copper traces/planes/polygons, and
another area has circuitry with small traces like 8mils, you may see the
"thin" side get over-etched. It is harder to control the etching of thick
copper and keep the "walls" of the trace squared-off. (Have you heard of
undercutting? the trace cross section looks kind of like a mushroom.)
Anyway, if you use thin traces, you might want to put thieving copper
around them.
Another trade-off is that there will be more plating in the holes, and if
the board house doesn't compensate for it with a larger drill, your
finished holes may be on the small side; might want to use slightly large
holes for through-hole components. Small vias can be a plating problem,
especially if the "power" board needs to be .093 or .125
Check with your vendor before you just assume they have what you need.
Most of them don't stock 4oz (haven't even heard of three oz), and you
might lose a day or two if they need to order it. Also, make sure they
know if you are calling out a material when you say 4oz, or if you mean
you want the finished thickness (after plating) to be at least 4oz.
> How much current can each oz carry for various widths?
Each ounce can carry the same amount as the other ounces (just kidding)
This is not so easy to answer, which is why there is a handy chart with
curves for different temperatures and copper thicknesses. (you also have
to know at what temperature (over ambient) that the board will be running
at). For any amount of current between 0-35 amps, you find how many
square mils of copper you need on the appropriate "temperature" curve.
Then you use the square mils on the appropriate copper thickness curve to
get the trace width. It is published in most design books and in
IPC-D-275, but if you can't find it I can scan it and shoot it over as a
BMP or GIF or whatever.
P.S. Keep in mind that small nicks in traces, and +/- 5-10% tolerance on
trace width is acceptable, so adjust the width UP to cover your a**.
NOW I HAVE A QUESTION:
As an example, say I need 5amps and 20 degrees over ambient is a safe
assumption. The chart gives ABOUT 100 square mils, which corresponds to
ABOUT a 75mil trace width on the 1oz copper curve.
OK, how many of you use 75mils? How safe is this number? Should I use
100? Is there a rule of thumb for "being on the safe side"? Please don't
quote this entire message if you want to answer... in fact, if you want
to answer privately I could summarize in a single post.... Thanks in
advance,
Jack
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