-
Hack Chat Transcript, Part 2
02/09/2022 at 21:17 • 0 comments!The whole "dragging the feet" and "quoting high" is not a real set in stone business decision. It's just the natural side effect of human beings doing their work. If your potential customer is frustrating to work with and doesn't know what to do, you just naturally put it off. Like washing the dishes or vacuum cleaning I guess lol
Hackaday.io starting engineers who have never been involved, but want to learn. Pool money and ideas, make "anything" and use it for training.
What would a good "starting project" cost? A "get to know each other" walk through? Doesn't matter what gets made, just make something to learn the steps. I am sort of thinking of a tutorial forThe podcast is a direct answer to that problem though. We know customers don't want to be frustrating their suppliers. 99% of the time it's just pure, forgiveable, ignorance. They just don't know. So we try to help.
Great answer, thanks Chris.
Customers don't intentionally try to make their suppliers (and their own) lives hard. But it's also a tough call to take on a customers job and the task of educating them as well.
@RichardCollins mmm.... hard to say really. It's so dependent on the design. For example, a 100% single-sided SMT board can be very cheap to assemble. In fact, each day we accept these kind of SMT only prototype orders at an aggressively discounted rate. But it's first come first serve until the capacity is filled for the day.
But let's say you wanted to assemble something with a little bit of complexity, and thru-hole. Say something like an Arduino Uno...
Sorry, I'm trying to use our quoting tools to figure this out in real time lol
I see Hackaday as a single community. Rather mixed group, but probably overall most everyone would like to know more about the kind of work you do. A well documented following of a board through the steps at a known facility would be worthwhile. A group could afford it. Take a few of the "good" things, with general use from Hackaday,io and make them for sale and distribution. To see how it works.
For a double-sided SMT board with some thru-hole that's about the size of an Arduino Uno... you're looking at maybe about $2,000 to get 50 made (not including PCB's and parts. Just talking the labor of assembling it).
Keep in mind, this is in the northeast of the United States with a highly skilled and reasonably well paid staff, using state of the art equipment. An Arduino Uno is kind of childsplay.
How about an "official" HaD badge?
Hackaday.io young engineers and designers - ADC, SDR, amplifiers. Lots of people making the same thing. i cannot design these things the way you want your designs sent to you. But I can see what people need. And give a few dollars.
I will give you $2000. Would you make something that had broad use byoh! that sounds quite promising
@RichardCollins I agree. I've long wanted to put together a YouTube "mini-series" that's just like 10 or 12 episodes long. Maybe 20 minutes each. Each episode just walks you through each of the processes involve in getting something out of KiCAD and into your hands.
That is not enough to pay for everything. But maybe if Hackaday could focus, and go through all the projects, there are some perennial projects that people keep trying - but they take forever because they don't know best practices, don't know how to make pcb designs, and don't have enough money to even start.
Oh man, I'd watch the heck out of that
The podcast has that, but in verbal form. It's much easier to produce than video, which is why it exists
@Dan Maloney lol - me too. My podcast co-host Melissa is *amazing* at video production. She produced our Join Us video. We've talked about doing it for years. Perhaps we just need to do it. https://www.worthingtonassembly.com/joinus
I vote yes, if that counts for anything!
...and my axe! =D
Look at the Tindie. Most are too narrow in purpose. And poorly designed. I doubt they sell. But with the manufacturer helping, Hackaday helping - with the intent to train ALL of HD young and old engineers it would be worthwhile.
@RichardCollins Yes, we've done pooled production before. There were a bunch of universities with some kind of neuroscience project they were working on together. They all pooled their resources and got a hundred of them made and we shipped appropriate quantities to each university.
ooh!
yall ever made, like, a blog post about that or something?
feels worth covering!
@Arsenijs blog post about what? Pooled production?
yes! and
especially "this is a project we've done in collaboration in universities, here's how it went"
*with uni
sounds exactly like a story that HaD readers would love to hear
ahhh... yeah I'm not sure if we did talk about it publicly or not.
actual hardware production is a Topic
like,a fundamental topic that is under-covered
and could change things in a big way
You're so right
@Chris Denney I have to get going. Thank you for the interesting and informative presentation and answers. If someone wants to try a group project, send me a private message. I expect there are companies who will match donations. Crowdfunding almost always gets over subscribed. The process, with planning, financial modeling and market research is the usual way.
We're at the top of the hour here, and it sounds like Chris has plenty of work that we're keeping him from, so I'm going to call an official end to the chat. I want to thank Chris for his time today, and to everyone for the great conversation. Feel free to carry on the chat, of course -- the Hack Chat is always open! Thanks
thank you so much! It's incredible under-covered. Our little podcast is like a bit of ice water in hell
Yeah you're very welcome. I'll stick around for a while. I had already booked a couple hours just in case anything ran overtime anyway.
@Chris Denney, and everyone for participating.
Thanks,Cool, I'll hold off on pulling the transcript for a bit.
If you want a quick 20 minutes of "this will change your life" kind of design tips, I recommend the talk I gave at KiCON in 2019 (2018 maybe...)
https://www.worthingtonassembly.com/blog/2019/6/21/your-manufacturer-is-stupid-help-them
WORTHINGTON ASSEMBLY INC. CHRIS DENNEY
Your Manufacturer Is Stupid - Help Them - Worthington Assembly Inc.
Here's a link to my talk at KiCon 2019 titled "Your Manufacturer Is Stupid - Help Them"
Read this on Worthington Assembly Inc.
Sort of my top 5 things of "Please help your manufacturer by doing this" -
Hack Chat Transcript, Part 1
02/09/2022 at 21:15 • 0 commentsWelcome to the Hack Chat everyone, Dan here with Dusan to moderate for Chris Denney as we kick off our Pick and Place Hack Chat.
Yeah, I'm a dope
Couldn't help the "hello everybody" when seeing Nicolas' profile
Welcome aboard Chris. Can you tell us a little about yourself, and maybe a bit about the podcast?
Hey everyone! Yeah, I thought the email title was weird...
Yeah sure
Thanks Chris, you're the first
I've been working in something related to the manufacturing of circuit boards since I was 16 years old. I've had lots of jobs in between what I'm doing now, which is I'm the CTO for an electronics contract manufacturer in South Deerfield, MA called Worthington Assembly.
The Pick, Place, Podcast grew out of lock down to be honest.
We used to do tours all the time for people so that they could get a better understanding of how to design their products to make them easier to assemble.
A lot of things did, or so it seems
But then during the beginning of covid we couldn't do tours anymore. So to keep the ball rolling with helping junior and mid-level engineers, we started the podcast as a way of describing how things are made and best practices to make getting *your* things made more easily.
@Nicolas Tremblay oh, I know I am. Surely, nobody has *ever* said that to you before. Just like nobody ever asks me if they can get a Grand Slam Breakfast.
The podcast is still just a side project. I still spend 40 hours a week actually running an electronics manufacturing operation. But definitely, it's my favorite thing I'm working on right now.
Despite the fact that I just completed a dream project of mine. I got to evaluate and spec out a brand new pick and place line. We just sent in an order last week for nearly $1M worth of gear. That was a really fun project actually.
https://www.fujiamerica.com/AIMEXIII.html
AIMEX III
Fuji America AIMEXII Flexible Placement Platforms are designed for component flexibility, PCB flexibility and production flexibility. The AIMEXII features an optimum conveyance line, support for new production introduction, V-advance and tray unit versatility.
That's the platform we went with. It's designed and manufactured in Japan. Fuji is probably the largest manufacturer of pick and place gear in the world. It's amazing gear.
I sort of feel like a man going through a midlife crisis who just bought a Ferrari lol
Using somebody else's checkbook to boot. I miss the days of spending company money ;-)
Are there that many needs for these pcbs? Junior engineers and designers don't buy much. Or do they? What drives this?
lol - yeah, kind of. I have a certain level of interest in the company, so I prefer not to spend too much of it
@RichardCollins honestly, it's just a passion to teach. When you first explain to a person what a fiducial is and why it's important, they light up. It's a great feeling.
Those junior engineers become senior engineers who eventually order PCB's. Or they tell their senior engineer what they learned on the PPP and they decide to listen too. And a question somewhat related to
A general question about the assembly business. It seems very distributed -- lots of small to medium sized contract manufacturers spread out all over the place. Is that perception correct? If so, what does that say about the assembly market?
@Dan Maloney 100% correct
@Chris Denney How do you go about picking between different machines at that scale - Fuji, Yamaha etc? All offer amazing machines and feature sets etc.
Most of the assembly houses are surviving on 2 or 3 key customers.
Those customers tend to grow very little and shrink very little, so their suppliers tend to grow very little or shrink very little.
A CM might have 50 different customers, but those 2 or 3 customers make up 80% of their business.
(side point: worthington is VERY different from this business model, but I digress)
@Dan Maloney That is my perception too - global fragmentation. Constant scrambling with no real direction or purpose.
Funny, I would have thought all assembly would have been off-shored years ago. It appears not though
@Unexpected Maker dude, it's freaking hard. Honestly. It took me over 3 years to research them all and narrow them down to just 2 manufacturers. They all make great stuff. You really need to look at yourself and what your goals are and try to find a supplier that really closely aligns to that.
@Dan Maloney The delays and uncertainty are too costly. Better to do it yourself.
Yes, for any kind of volume, it largely has. But anything 10,000 pieces an under, it still tends to get done domestically. That's not absolutely true, but that's what we're seeing.
@Dan Maloney and communication breakdowns happen often, with delayed turnarounds for resolutions.
IP concerns are a big part of it too. American companies tend to trust American suppliers more to protect their IP.
@Unexpected Maker So true. We source PCB's from a Chinese supplier. They do amazing work. And after 6+ years of working directly with them, we have a great system for communicating with them. But even still, the time delay can be brutal.
@Chris Denney I have been calling that "under 10,000" something like "short run manufacturing" as a part of the early development and proof of concept. Then it gets taken and makes money for someone else.
@RichardCollins yep, makes sense.
We're fine with that too. We're never heartbroken over a customer outgrowing us.
Some CM's will actually partner with an overseas assembly shop to take customers from the sub-10,000 pieces to 10,000+ pieces. I honestly don't know how effective it is, but I've heard of it.
What range of things can you make?
oh god, that podcast idea sounds amazing, how did I not know of this
@RichardCollins We really try to just focus on circuit board assembly. For large enough customers we'll branch out into box builds and functional test, and that sort of thing. But really we just want to optimize for circuit board assembly.
@Arsenijs lol - yeah, I'm terrible at marketing it honestly lol
let's see! ^^
https://feeds.buzzsprout.com/1066066.rss
Here's the RSS feedI will say, the cool thing about the podcast is that you can totally tell when somebody is a listener.
By which I mean, when we go to assemble a board of somebody who's a listener, you can see all of the tell-tale signs of them listening carefully and following our advice. It's super cool.
Those jobs just sling through the factory.
I only found out about the podcast today because of this hack chat. Bummed I didn't know about ti sooner!
same, and same!
Then you get the orders where somebody clearly hasn't baked their design enough and it's like cold molasses in a Massachusetts winter.
@Chris Denney So what's the smallest job size you'll take on with a customer?
We take 1 piece orders. Most domestic shops do. But usually those 1 pieces orders are insanely complex boards. For the most part, the minimum cost of setting up an SMT line for an assembly is significant enough that most people order at least like 5 boards or more.
We love the complicated 1 piece orders though. In some ways they're so much easier than a 500 piece order.
Your "board with listener" comment sounds like you are proposing useful directions and products too. Do you have some favorite things you like to work on?
You can muscle through almost any complicated problem on a 1 piece order. But if you get even one significant problem on a 500 piece order.... nightmare.
Ha! Tuning for 1 board is def easier than getting consistency on 500 or 5000. Well, with a $1 million line, that should not be a problem!
@RichardCollins Yeah absolutely. On the podcast we give all kinds of best practices. We don't necessarily recommend products, but we recommend just basic good sense things like clear polarity indicators, legible silkscreen, green solder mask, use of fiducials, etc.
@Unexpected Maker hahaha, yeah well... that $1M line gets you a lot of horsepower and tools to solve problems. But it can't fix a bad design.
So do you offer in line testing? Do you provide services to built those tests? how do you validate your assembly is correct?
Usually if a board is well designed, we have no trouble assembling it. It's when the board has some kind of weird design issue that we end up struggling. I call it a "weird design issue" and not necessarily a "design flaw". Because sometimes it's a perfectly fine design, but it's a design to that makes manufacturing difficult.
Why green solder mask specifically? Do other colors cause optical problems or something?
I get asked to do small CM work all the time, and I knock it all back - I just don't want to be responsible for a product I didn't design .
@Unexpected Maker Under 10,000 pieces (honestly probably under 100,000 pieces) nobody does actual "inline" testing. It'll be done at a workbench in batches. Yes, we do offer that. And as a matter of fact, that's the next episode of the podcast! Totally not kidding. We're having the folks from FixturFab on the show. We're recording tomorrow and will be publishing it on the 21st.
@Dan Maloney Yes, 100>#/span###
Green has been used for so long that the chemical companies have just nailed it
@Dan Maloney green is definitely easier to reflow, and generally you get better solder-mask tolerances and accuracy from PCB manufacturers with green. They've just been doing it for longer and have better processes I think.
So your podcast, reaching out to young designers is an investment in growth of a market. The markets I know use sensors and control systems that might use these pcbs, but need to interface to MegaWatt and larger systems. Things that new designers work on probably need a global community to have enough brains to click and grow.
You can get the finest lines and the best finishes. So when you have your fancy 0.4mm pitch QFN on the board, the PCB fab will have no trouble getting solder mask dams between the pads so that the assembly shop doesn't deal with all kinds of nasty solder bridges.
Also, AOI (automated optical inspection) systems really like green. Colors like red and white can be done, they just take more fine tuning.
Black is annoying because it's just hard to see black parts on a black board. Think about it. A missing 0402 resistor stands out on a green board. It's practically invisible on a black board.
@Chris Denney Most "good" PCB houses are getting much better at black solder-mask. It used to be an issue, but even with 0.4mm pitch, they can do solder-mask bridges properly now. If only they could get consistent batch colours.... that would be nice! So many shades of black ;)
@Unexpected Maker yep. They're getting much better. We usually have to push a new PCB supplier to do it with black because they think they can't. But eventually they figure it out.
Most of the PCB suppliers we've been using for years have gotten good at it and don't have any trouble with it now.
The other annoying thing about black PCB's is that they reflect so little light that PCB sensors in automated machines can sometimes struggle with seeing the PCB.
So for example when the PCB has reached the end of a conveyor, that sensor that's looking for the PCB to arrive might not get enough reflected light off the PCB to know that it has arrived.
@Chris Denney YES! I get that often. I do all of my products in matte black, and my lines sensors HATE THEM!
This isn't much of an issue with new equipment, but the older conveyors we had struggled with this before we replaced the sensors.
@Unexpected Maker Wait, dude, you're in Melbourne!? Isn't it like 2 in the morning over there?
Black solder-mask and badly placed routing - lol, sensor nightmare.
Melbourne, btw, my favorite city in the world.
haha, nah, 7:30am.
My wife and I visited there in 2019, right before the pandemic. Such an awesome city. After we got home I had dreams that we were shopping for houses there lol
Melbourne is awesome! Just so far away from "the rest of the world"... :(
https://www.davidshotpot.com.au/en/
Best hot pot I've ever had in my lifeI hope everybody is enjoying the Melbourne Australia Hack Chat lol
So when a new client comes to you for CM work - do you evaluate them as well as their design? Like, this board might be ok, but this client might not be? Feel free to not answer :)
@Unexpected Maker You asked how we evaluate pick and place suppliers... well we actually had an entire episode dedicated to the subject. https://www.pickplacepodcast.com/episodes/ep35evaluating-pick-and-place-machine-suppliers
ah! can tell some insights?
@Unexpected Maker *Excellent* question. We sort of do and we sort of don't
Let me explain
@Chris Denney I have your entire backlog to go through! I'm so excited!
Worthington is an old company. We've been in business since the mid-70's. That traditional business model will do a "read the tea leaves" kind of evaluation of a customer. You can sort of tell when a potential customer just doesn't have their act together. So you may kind of drag your feet getting them a quote, or quote them really high. I know. It sucks. But that's the truth.
Whereas, our software platform CircuitHub is completely different. That's just a straight up website where you place an order, and we have no choice but to build it, despite how nasty the design might be.
(CircuitHub is it's own company, but it gets complicated to explain. So I'm just going to refer to them as "our software platform")
@Arsenijs insights into?
ah, just what you&apos