GIS user technology news

News, Business, AI, Technology, IOS, Android, Google, Mobile, GIS, Crypto Currency, Economics

  • Advertising & Sponsored Posts
    • Advertising & Sponsored Posts
    • Submit Press
  • PRESS
    • Submit PR
    • Top Press
    • Business
    • Software
    • Hardware
    • UAV News
    • Mobile Technology
  • FEATURES
    • Around the Web
    • Social Media Features
    • EXPERTS & Guests
    • Tips
    • Infographics
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Shop
  • Tradepubs
  • CAREERS
You are here: Home / * PRESS / Business / How to Prevent a Hairline Short Circuit

How to Prevent a Hairline Short Circuit

January 30, 2018 By GISuser

A hairline short circuit happens when there is a chance connection between two unconnected signals. For instance, when a positive connection connects with the signal on the ground, it becomes a short circuit. If thick copper ties the signals, you can easily see the short circuit when it occurs. If you manually build your Printed PCB Circuit Design Boards (PCBs) instead of machine produce them, short circuits occur more.

When you manufacture your PCB by machine, a hairline short circuit is a genuine concern. The reason for this is that thin copper, as thin a hair strand, has the ability to connect two separate signals. You may not detect this kind of short circuit unless the PCBs undergo some QC testing. If you discover a short circuit at this late stage of production, then it causes great losses in energy, time and raw materials.

You have to thoroughly understand the PCB building process to understand how short-circuiting occurs. A PCB’s composition is copper, overlaid on a non-adaptive surface. The most popular method remains to engrave the circuitry on the PCB by using photo engravement. A photoresist coating makes up the PCB, and a laminate consisting of a silk screen holds and covers the circuit image.

The PCB undergoes exposure to ultraviolet light and you use an ammonia-based mixture to remove the parts the silkscreen did not cover. A mistake in the automated procedures could cause a narrow copper line that connects pads or different signal tracks. If the after manufacture tests are not thorough, problems arise later.

You should never assume that the PCB manufacturer has carried out all the required electrical post-manufacture tests. You should always endeavor to pass your PCBs through electrical tests such as the Flying Probe Test before assembly. This Flying Probe Test passes high-accuracy scrutiny over the components to check for manufacturing and design faults and errors.

The electrical testing does not provide a 100% error margin. Hairline short circuits have a possibility of escaping detection in testing. To minimize your risks, make sure your PCB provider encompasses a policy for reimbursement strategy. This ensures you get reimbursement for every PCB that goes through the electrical test and turns out faulty. A good manufacturer with a reputation to uphold replaces and reimburses the raw material cost.

As a designer, you also have the responsibility of reducing the probability of PCB faults. You can do this, while also watching your budget or form factor. This is by opting for a bigger gap between the pads and copper connections. No studies exist that link hairline short circuits with the gap between the copper connections. The best way is to avoid maxing out the supplier’s capability. Try to add the tolerance of your clearances in your designs. If for instance, a supplier makes a specification that, the PCB can handle 5-mil clearance and trace width, make sure you set up your design with a clearance of 6. As an engineer, you need to always test the manufacturer’s limit, albeit on a smaller capacity, rather than risk a huge production batch.

Good quality PCB designing software let you set clearance instructions that govern your design check-up before you do production finalization.

Filed Under: Business

Editor’s Picks

JavaScript: Best Practice

JavaScript: Best Practices

Global Earthquake Numbers on Par for 2015

HERE Beta Will Challenge Your Google Maps Loyalty

Location Privacy and What you Might be Sharing Over Public WiFi

See More Editor's Picks...

Recent Industry News

Aerial Surveys Int’l and Global Marketing Insights to Present GEOINT 2026 Workshop on Multi-Domain Geospatial Fusion for Automated Infrastructure Monitoring

April 24, 2026 By GISuser

Why Timing Matters More Than You Think With Spray Seal (And Why People Often Get It Slightly Wrong)

April 22, 2026 By GISuser

The Quiet Planning Stage Most People Don’t See When Building a Pool in Brisbane

April 22, 2026 By GISuser

Best Equipment Labels for Industrial Use: Ranked Systems That Survive Real-World Conditions

April 17, 2026 By GISuser

Hot News

State of Data Science Report – AI and Open Source at Work

HERE and AWS Collaborate on New HERE AI Mapping Solutions

Virtual Surveyor Adds Productivity Tools to Mid-Level Smart Drone Surveying Software Plan

Categories

Copyright gletham Communications 2015 - 2026

Go to mobile version