Who here has used PCBA from China?

aroldorosenberg
Sun Dec 23, 2018 4:27 pm
On instagram if you post anything diy-electronics related a bunch of chinese dudes will throw themselves at you offering PCB + SMT assembly service, which is really nice. It looks like 2019 is going to see a boom of new board designs, especially with that going on. JLCPCB is going to offer SMT assembly as well.

Usually it costs a lot per unit when you’re only going to make 10 or 20 boards, but if any of you browse Alibaba you probably know there are a ton of desktop pick and place machines, which is likely what the smaller business are using.

What is your experience with this kind of service?


RogerClark
Sun Dec 23, 2018 7:46 pm
I had 100 prototypes made by a small company in China, and when I asked if they used one if that sort of machine, they told me that they didn’t think those machines were any good,

They would hand place and then reflow solder in a small oven , for small runs of up to perhaps 50 boards , and for more complex boards or larger runs, they just sub contracted the work out to larger manufacturers with industrial scale pick and place machines.


ag123
Mon Dec 24, 2018 2:35 am
the pick and place machine looked quite impressive, but it seem a little strange that they seem to hand solder the pieces afterwards.
i think there is productivity gain if the number of pieces is moderately large but that it seemed hand soldering defeats it next
(edit: mistake, there is a reflow soldering machine just beside. it seemed the pieces hand soldered are simply because it can’t be reflow soldered)
if the pieces are few, pick and place may take a lot of effort to setup and configure/calibrate and possibly may not be worth the setup effort

for a hobby diy pcb in low volumes, these days there are low cost grbl based engraving/milling machines
https://www.aliexpress.com/wholesale?ca … nc+machine
i think that’s pretty effective to make pcbs in small volumes and without chemicals
(oops off topic, but pcba would still matter if one is making the end product in larger volumes)


RogerClark
Mon Dec 24, 2018 7:04 am
@ag123

I have tried using those sort of milling machines to make a PCB, but unless you make PCB’s all the time with them, its a pain to get it working.

The people who have succeeded milling PCB’s often modify the CNC machines quite a lot and also do fancy tricks like terrain mapping of the PCB surface and post processing the plot files to map in the terrain.

The CNC’s kinda work if you want to do pretty basic boards, not with IC’s like the STM32’s pad spacing.

I think for less than 10 boards, just pay extra and get them FedEx’ed back from China etc, then hand place and reflow them.

For anything else, its getting into the small scale commercial sector and you just have to pay $$ and get them manufactured professionally in China or elsewhere


ag123
Mon Dec 24, 2018 3:06 pm
thanks, i just acquired one of those cnc recently still not received, hence, i’ve not tried anything yet. it is rather cheap at about usd $100 incl shipping but the bed size is only 160mm x 100mm, pretty much a ‘toy’ and for me i’m messing with it as a hobby
i do agree that for serious production cnc is probably not the way to go, it is probably useful for a prototype or only a few boards and for simple boards,
For production quantities the normal pcb processes may likely be far simpler, faster and is less prone to problems
i think part of the problem is the s/w and the machines themselves, the cheapest (chinese) ones are barebones which leaves everything from zeroing the steppers, calibrating, assembling etc all to the user.
components etc may well be compromised for costs rather than proper design and reliability

in terms of s/w i stumbled into flatcam, it seemed to be quite popular from articles i came across on the web
http://flatcam.org/


RogerClark
Mon Dec 24, 2018 8:38 pm
@ag123

I think if you can make these things mill PCBs .

I see that FlatCam shows images of normal through hole PCBs , and I think that sort of PCB is possible, I just found great difficulty trying to mill PCBs for SMD chips.

The machine has been gathering dust for about a year, but it’s on my list as one of the things I have to get working again over the holidays as I want to mill some brackets out if aluminium sheet


aroldorosenberg
Mon Dec 24, 2018 8:48 pm
You need a very accurate machine with a very good resolution in order to be able to mill PCB’s for smd components. Something very rigid, with no backlash, with a fine pitch leadscrew and or a belted reduction on every axis. I want to make a mini-CNC like this just so I don’t have to wait 1 month for PCB’s to be delivered or get the exposure just right with dry film, but I also want my boards to be produced in reasonable quantities for commercial purposes, hence the thread


ag123
Tue Dec 25, 2018 5:46 pm
i kind of ‘bought into the idea’ of cnc milling pcb after reading this post that i stumbled into
https://forum.electricunicycle.org/topi … nc-router/
the author did mention something about smd pcbs, as i’ve not tried these myself i could only post the link to it.
as open sourced softwares take time to develop / improve as well, my guess is that you may like to check the recent version of the softwares (e.g. flatcam) and try them out if you already have a ‘gbrl’ cnc, the author mentioned about the engraving bit : 30 degrees, 0.1mm and a particular type they are moderate cost on aliexpress (e.g. https://www.aliexpress.com/wholesale?ca … +30+degree) in the thread as well, that may make a difference in the engraving/milling process, accurate autoleveling may matter as well as the board may not be level / flat while working on it
there are also things like feed rate i.e. the movement speed which i think would need to be pretty low (slow) on those cheap millers
nevertheless i still think s/w like flatcam is basically evolving and may not (yet) be able to tackle smd mcus
i just thought that if they are sufficiently good they may help if you simply need a single piece of pcb made and that you happen to have the machine handy

for production quantities, for that matter even 10 boards it may be a different story altogether. manufacturing requires reliable processes to achieve decent consistent quality etc in which such ‘prototype’ techniques may fail or is too laborious, slow. i’d think for that it would be better to let those who have the means make them


203null
Wed Dec 26, 2018 4:37 pm
I have ordered some PCBAs from China recently, and also last year. tbh no sure what they did…

MoDu
Thu Dec 27, 2018 1:45 pm
[aroldorosenberg – Sun Dec 23, 2018 4:27 pm] – LCPCB is going to offer SMT assembly as well.

Oooo la la, music to my hears. My experience with them so far has been top notch.


C_D
Thu Jan 10, 2019 10:42 pm
I get medium – large runs of boards manufactured by PCBCart. They are pretty economical for 50 – 2000 pieces. Quality and communication are excellent. I know people who use PCBWay too, lower quality work but cheaper.

I find that for < 10 boards its usually more economical for me to place by hand and then reflow. I get my PCB’s from SeeedStudio, mostly 2-layer and under 100x100mm, but I have done larger 4-layer boards from them too (though they get MUCH more expensive). I reflow single sided boards on a hot plate and double sided go on the hot plate then hot air gun for the back side. Usually just prototyping stuff, I probably wouldn’t send out parts to a customer that had been hand built like that. I wouldn’t want to bet money on long term reliability.

If your getting into 20+ boards the cost savings on the components via PCBCart starts to offset the setup time. If you are happy to take ‘locally sourced’ parts for things like pin headers and terminal blocks you can save quite a bit vs Digikey/E14 pricing.


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