| PCB Glossary : |
| Check out the
printed circuit board
industry is full of specific terminology
and acronyms. To assist you in designing and ordering your circuit board, we’ve
put together the following list of common terms: |
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| Annular Ring:
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| That portion of conductive material completely surrounding a hole.
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| Aperture Information:
|
| This is a text file describing the size and shape of each element on the board.
These are also known as D-code lists. These lists are not necessary if your
files are saved as Extended Gerber with embedded Apertures (RS274X). |
| Array: |
| A group of elements or circuits (or circuit boards) arranged in rows and
columns on a base material.
|
| Artwork:
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| An accurately scaled configuration used to produce the artwork master or
production master. |
| Artwork Master:
|
| The photographic film that embodies the image of the PCB pattern, usually on a
1:1 scale.
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| Aspect Ratio: |
| A ratio of the PCB thickness to the diameter of the smallest hole.
|
| Automated Optical Inspection (AOI):
|
| Visual inspection of the circuit boards using a machine scanner to assess
workmanship quality. |
| Automatic Test Equipment (ATE):
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| Equipment that automatically analyzes functional or static parameters in order
to evaluate performance. |
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| Barrel: |
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The cylinder formed by plating through a drilled hole.
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| Base Copper: |
| The thin copper foil portion of a copper-clad laminate for PCBs. It can be
present on one or both sides of the board, and on inner layers. |
| Base Material: |
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The insulating material upon which a conductive pattern may be formed. It may
be rigid or flexible or both. It may be a dielectric or insulated metal sheet. |
| Base Material Thickness: |
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The thickness of the base material excluding metal foil or material deposited
on the surface. |
| Bed-Of-Nails Fixture: |
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A test fixture consisting of a frame and a holder containing a field of
spring-loaded pins that make electrical contact with a planar test object
(i.e., a PCB). |
| Bevel: |
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An angled edge of a printed board.
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| Blind Via: |
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A conductive surface hole that connects an outer layer with an inner layer of a
multi-layer board. |
| Blister: |
|
A localized swelling and separation between any of the layers of a laminated
base material, or between base material or conductive foil. It is a form of
Delamination. |
| Bond Strength: |
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The force per unit area required to separate two adjacent layers of a board by
a force perpendicular to the board surface. |
| Bow: |
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The deviation from flatness of a board, characterized by a roughly cylindrical
or spherical curvature such that if the board is rectangular. Its four corners
are in the same plane. |
| B-Stage Material: |
|
Sheet material impregnated with a resin cured to an intermediate stage (B-stage
resin). Prepreg is the popular term. |
| B-Stage Resin: |
|
A thermosetting resin that is in an intermediate state of cure. |
| Buried Via: |
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A via hole that does not extend to the surface of a printed board. |
| Burr: |
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| CAD: |
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See Computer-Aided Design. |
| CAM: |
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See Computer-Aided Manufacturing. |
| Chamfer: |
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A broken corner to eliminate an otherwise sharp edge. |
| Circuit: |
|
The interconnection of a number of devices in one or more closed paths to
perform a desired electrical or electronic function. |
| Circuitry Layer: |
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A layer of a printed board containing conductors, including ground and voltage
planes. |
| Cleanroom: |
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A room in which the concentration or airborne particles is controlled to
specified limits. |
| Component: |
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An electronic device, typically a resistor, capacitor, inductor, or integrated
circuit (IC), that is mounted to the circuit board and performs a specific
electrical function. |
| Component Hole: |
|
A hole used for the attachment and electrical connection of a component
termination, such as a pin or wire to the circuit board. |
| Component Side: |
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The side of the circuit board on which most of the components will be located.
Also called the “top side.” |
| Computer-Aided Design (CAD): |
|
A software program with algorithms for drafting and modeling, providing a
graphical representation of a printed board’s conductor layout and signal
routes. |
| Computer-Aided Manufacturing (CAM): |
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The use of computers to analyze and transfer an electronic design (CAD) to the
manufacturing floor. |
| Computer-Integrated Manufacturing (CIM): |
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Software that takes assembly data from a CAD or CAM package and, using a
pre-defined factory modeling system, outputs routing of components to machine
programming points and assembly and inspection documentation. |
| Conductor: |
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A thin conductive area on a PCB surface or internal layer usually composed of
lands (to which component leads are connected) and paths (traces). |
| Conductor Spacing: |
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The distance between adjacent edges (not centerline to centerline) of isolated
conductive patterns in a conductor layer. |
| Conductor Thickness: |
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The thickness of the conductor including all metallic coatings. |
| Conformal Coating: |
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An insulating protective coating that conforms to the configuration of the
object coated and is applied on the completed board assembly. |
| Connector Area: |
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The portion of the circuit board that is used for providing electrical
connections. |
| Controlled Impedance: |
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The matching of substrate material properties with trace dimensions and
locations to create specific electric impedance as seen by a signal on the
trace. |
| Core Thickness: |
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The thickness of the laminate base without copper. |
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| Defect: |
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Any nonconformance to specified requirements by a unit or product. |
| Definition: |
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The fidelity of reproduction of pattern edges, especially in a printed circuit
relative to the original master pattern. |
| Delamination: |
|
A separation between any of the layers of the base of laminate or between the
laminate and the metal cladding originating from or extending to the edges of a
hole or edge of board. |
| Design Rule Checking: |
|
The use of a computer program to perform continuity verification of all
conductor routing in accordance with appropriate design rules. |
| Desmear: |
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The removal of friction-melted resin and drilling debris from a hole wall. |
| Dewetting: |
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A condition that results when molten solder has coated a surface and then
receded, leaving irregularly shaped mounds separated by areas covered with a
thin solder film and with the base material not exposed. |
| Dielectric: |
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An insulating medium that occupies the region between two conductors. |
| Dimensional Stability: |
|
A measure of the dimensional change of a material that is caused by factors
such as temperature changes, humidity changes, chemical treatment, and stress
exposure. |
| Double-Sided Board: |
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A printed board with a conductive pattern on both sides. |
| Drilling: |
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The act of forming holes (vias) in a substrate by mechanical or laser means. |
| Dry-Film Resists: |
|
Coating material specifically designed for use in the manufacture of printed
circuit boards and chemically machined parts. They are suitable for all
photomechanical operations and are resistant to various electroplating and
etching processes. |
| Dry-Film Soldermask: |
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Coating material (dry-film resist) applied to the printed circuit board via a
lamination process to protect the board from solder or plating. |
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| Electroless Copper: |
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A thin layer of copper deposited on the plastic or metallic surface of a PCB
from an autocatalytic plating solution (without the application of electrical
current). |
| Electroplating: |
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The electrodeposition of an adherent metal coating on a conductive object. The
object to be plated is placed in an electrolyte and connected to one terminal
of a direct current (DC) voltage source. The metal to be deposited is similarly
immersed and connected to the other terminal. |
| Epoxy: |
|
A family of thermosetting resins. Epoxies form a chemical bond to many metal
surfaces. |
| Epoxy Smear: |
|
Epoxy resin that has been deposited on edges of copper in holes during drilling
either as uniform coating or in scattered patches. It is undesirable because it
can electrically isolate the conductive layers from the plated-through-hole
interconnections. |
| Etchback: |
|
The controlled removal of all components of the base material by a chemical
process acting on the sidewalls of plated-through holes to expose additional
internal conductor areas. |
| Etching: |
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The chemical, or chemical and electrolytic, removal of unwanted portions of
conductive materials. |
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| Flying Probe: |
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A testing device that uses multiple moving pins to make contact with two spots
on the electrical circuit and send a signal between them, a procedure that
determines whether faults exist. |
| FR-4: |
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The UL-designated rating for a laminate composed of glass and epoxy that meets
a specific standard for fire-retardance. FR-4 is the most common dielectric
material used in the construction of PCBs. |
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| Gerber: |
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A software format used by the photoplotter to describe the printed circuit
board design. |
| Golden Board: |
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See Known Good Board. |
| Ground Plane: |
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A conductor layer, or portion of a conductor layer, used as a common reference
point for circuit returns, shielding, or heat sinking. |
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| Hole Breakout: |
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A condition in which a hole is partially surrounded by the land. |
| Hole Pattern: |
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The arrangement of all holes in a printed board with respect to a reference
point. |
| Hot Air Solder Leveling (HASL): |
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A method of coating exposed copper with solder by inserting a panel into a bath
of molten solder then passing the panel rapidly past jets of hot air. |
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| Imaging: |
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The process by which panelization data are transferred to the photoplotter,
which in turn uses light to transfer a negative image circuitry pattern onto
the panel. |
| Impedance: |
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The total passive opposition offered to the flow of electric current. This term
is generally used to describe high-frequency circuit boards. |
| Inner-layers: |
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The internal layers of laminate and metal foil within a multi-layer board. |
| Insulation Resistance: |
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The electrical resistance of an insulating material that is determined under
specific conditions between any pair of contacts, conductors, or grounding
devices in various combinations. |
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| Known Good Board (KGB): |
|
A board or assembly that is verified to be free of defects. Also known as a
Golden Board. |
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| Laminate: |
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The plastic material usually reinforced by glass or paper that supports the
copper cladding from which circuit traces are created. |
| Laminate Thickness: |
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Thickness of the metal-clad base material, single- or double-sided, prior to
any subsequent processing. |
| Laminate Void: |
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An absence of epoxy resin in any cross-sectional area that should normally
contain epoxy resin. |
| Land: |
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The portion of the conductive pattern on printed circuits designated for the
mounting or attachment of components. Also called a pad. |
| Layup: |
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The process in which treated prepregs and copper foils are assembled for
pressing. |
| Legend: |
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A format of lettering or symbols on the printed circuit board: e.g. part
number, serial number, component locations, and patterns. |
| Liquid Photoimageable Soldermask (LPI): |
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A mask using photographic imaging techniques to control deposition. |
| Line: |
|
See Conductor. |
| Lot: |
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A quantity of circuit boards that share a common design. |
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| Major Defect: |
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A defect that is likely to result in failure of a unit or product by materially
reducing its usability for its intended purpose. |
| Mask: |
|
A material applied to enable selective etching, plating, or the application of
solder to a PCB. Also called soldermask or resist. |
| Metal Foil: |
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The plane of conductive material of a printed board from which circuits are
formed. Metal foil is generally copper and is provided in sheets or rolls. |
| Microsectioning: |
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The preparation of a specimen of a material, or materials, that is to be used
in metallographic examination. This usually consists of cutting out a
cross-section followed by encapsulation, polishing, etching, and staining. |
| Minor Defect: |
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A defect that is not likely to result in the failure of a unit of product or
that does not reduce the usability for its intended purpose. |
| Multi-Layer Board: |
|
Printed boards consisting of a number (four or more) of separate conducting
circuit planes separated by insulating materials and bonded together into
relatively thin homogeneous constructions with internal and external
connections to each level of the circuitry as needed. |
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| Nomenclature: |
|
Identification symbols applied to the board by means of screen printing,
inkjetting, or laser processes. See Legend. |
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| Outer-layer: |
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The top and bottom sides of any type of circuit board. |
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| Pad: |
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See Land. |
| Pattern: |
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The configuration of conductive and nonconductive materials on a panel or
printed board. Also, the circuit configuration on related tools, drawing, and
masters. |
| Pattern Plating: |
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The selective plating of a conductive pattern. |
| Photographic Image: |
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An image in a photo mask or in an emulsion that is on a film or plate. |
| Photoplotting: |
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A photographic process whereby an image is generated by a controlled light beam
that directly exposes a light-sensitive material. |
| Photo Print: |
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The process of forming a circuit pattern image by hardening a photosensitive
polymeric material by passing light through a photographic film. |
| Phototool: |
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A transparent film that contains the circuit pattern, which is represented by a
series of lines of dots at a high resolution. |
| Plated Through-Hole: |
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A hole with plating on its walls that makes an electrical connection between
conductive layers, external layers, or both of a printed board. |
| Platen: |
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A flat plate of metal within the lamination press in between which stacks are
placed during pressing. |
| Plating Void: |
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The area of absence of a specific metal from a specific cross-sectional area. |
| Plotting: |
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The mechanical converting of X-Y positional information into a visual pattern
such as artwork. |
| Prepreg: |
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Sheet material (e.g. glass fabric) impregnated with a resin cured to an
intermediate stage (B-stage resin). |
| Pressing: |
|
The process by which a combination of heat and pressure are applied to a book,
thereby producing fully cured laminated sheets. |
| Printed Board: |
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The general term for completely processed printed circuit or printed wiring
configurations. It includes single, double-sided, and multi-layer boards, both
rigid and flexible. |
| Printed Circuit: |
|
A conductive pattern that comprises printed components, printed wiring, or a
combination thereof, all formed in a predetermined design and intended to be
attached to a common base. (In addition, this is a generic term used to
describe a printed board produced by any of a number of techniques.) |
| Printed Wiring Board: |
|
A part manufactured from rigid base material upon which completely processed
printed wiring has been formed. |
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| Registration: |
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The degree of conformity to the position of a pattern, or a portion thereof, a
hole or other feature to its intended position on a product. |
| Resin (Epoxy) Smear: |
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Resin transferred from the base material onto the surface of the conductive
pattern in the wall of a drilled hole. |
| Resist: |
|
Coating material used to mask or to protect selected areas of a pattern from
the action of an etchant, solder, or plating. Also called soldermask or mask. |
| Rigid-flex: |
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A PCB construction combining flexible circuits and rigid multi-layers usually
to provide a built-in connection or to make a three-dimension form that
includes components. |
| Router: |
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A machine that cuts away portions of the laminate to form the desired shape and
size of the printed board. |
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| Scoring: |
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A technique in which grooves are machined on opposite sides of a panel to a
depth that permits individual boards to be separated from the panel after
component assembly. |
| Screen Printing: |
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A process for transferring an image to a surface by forcing suitable media
through a stencil screen with a squeegee. |
| Single-Sided Board: |
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A printed board with conductive pattern on one side only. |
| Soldermask Over Bare Copper (SMOBC): |
|
A method of fabricating a printed circuit board that results in final
metallization being copper with no protective metal. The non-coated areas are
coated by solder resist, exposing only the component terminal areas. This
eliminates tin lead under the pads. |
| Surface Mount Technology (SMT): |
|
Defines the entire body of processes and components that create printed circuit
board assemblies with leadless components. |
| Solder: |
|
An alloy that melts at relatively low temperatures and is used to join or seal
metals with higher melting points. A metal alloy with a melting temperature
below 427°C (800°F). |
| Soldermask: |
|
Coating material used to mask or to protect selected areas of a pattern from
the action of an etchant, solder, or plating. Also called resist or mask. |
| Step-and-Repeat: |
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A method by which successive exposures to a single image are made to produce a
multiple image production master. |
| Stripping: |
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The process by which imaging material (resist) is chemically removed from a
panel during fabrication. |
| Substrate: |
|
A material on whose surface adhesive substance is spread for bonding or
coating. Also, any material that provides a supporting surface for other
materials used to support printed circuit patterns. |
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| Test Coupon: |
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A portion of a printed board or of a panel containing printed coupons used to
determine the acceptability of such a board. |
| TG: |
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Glass transition temperature. The point at which rising temperatures cause the
solid base laminate to start to exhibit soft, plastic-like symptoms. This is
expressed in degrees Celsius (°C). |
| Tooling Holes: |
|
The general term for holes placed on a PCB or a panel of PCBs for registration
and hold-down purposes during the manufacturing process. |
| Top Side: |
|
See Component Side. |
| Trace: |
|
A common term for conductor. |
| Traveler: |
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The list of instructions describing the board, including any specific
processing requirements. Also called a shop traveler, routing sheet, job order,
or production order. |
| Twist: |
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A laminate defect in which deviation from planarity results in a twisted arc. |
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| UL: |
|
Underwriters Laboratories, Inc., an independent product safety testing and
certification organization. |
| Underwriters Symbol: |
|
A logotype denoting that a product has been recognized (accepted) by
Underwriters Laboratories Inc. (UL). |
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| Via: |
|
A plated through-hole that is used as an interlayer connection but does not
have component lead or other reinforcing material inserted in it. |
| Void: |
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The absence of any substances in a localized area. |
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| Wave Soldering: |
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A process wherein assembled printed boards are brought in contact with a
continuously flowing and circulating mass of solder, typically in a bath. |
| Working Master: |
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| X Axis: |
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The horizontal or left-to-right direction in a two dimensional system or
coordinates. |
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| Y Axis: |
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The verticle or bottom-to-top direction in a two dimensional system of
coordinates. |
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| Z Axis: |
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Perpendicular to the plane formed by the X and the Y datum reference. |
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