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What Is PCB Production?
The PCB surface undergoes surface finishing to prevent oxidation and improve solderability. Common finishes include HASL (Hot Air Solder Leveling), ENIG (Electroless Nickel Immersion Gold), and OSP (Organic Solderability Preservative). The board is then **solder masked**, a protective green (or sometimes other colored) coating that insulates copper traces and prevents solder bridges during assembly. Finally, a silkscreen layer is applied to print component labels, reference indicators, and other useful markings.
After fabrication, the PCB enters the assembly pcb production stage. Electronic components such as resistors, capacitors, and integrated circuits are mounted onto the board. Depending on the type of components used, assembly can be either **through-hole**, where leads are inserted into drilled holes and soldered, or **surface-mount technology (SMT)**, where components are placed directly onto copper pads and soldered using reflow ovens. Automated pick-and-place machines ensure precision and efficiency in modern PCB assembly lines.
The final steps in PCB production include **inspection and testing**. Visual inspections, automated optical inspection (AOI), and electrical tests such as continuity and in-circuit testing ensure that the board functions as intended. Only after passing all quality checks are the boards ready for integration into electronic devices.
In summary, PCB production is a highly technical and multi-step process that transforms a digital design into a functional hardware component. It combines engineering precision, material science, and automated manufacturing to create the foundation of today’s electronic world.
There’s been a lot of talk lately about reindustrializing America. Between the CHIPS Act, reshoring incentives, venture-backed manufacturing startups, and even the latest
, the message is clear: America should build more of its own stuff, including electronics. But what does that actually look like?
We recently had the chance to see for ourselves, touring one of
where commercial prototypes are built in just 1 to 3 days. These are the boards used in prototyping and low-to-medium volume production: small batches, tight timelines, and no room for delay. There’s a good chance your prototype boards were built in a shop like this, in the kind of place that cranks out quick-turn PCBs for everyone from weekend tinkerers to massive organizations spending millions a month in R&D.
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