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Bare Board Electrical Testing Capabilities

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6 YRS MOKO Technology Ltd

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jenny@mokotechnology.com.cn
+8613480995660

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Find high quality bare board electrical testing capabilities with competitive price here. Please rest assured to buy bare board electrical testing capabilities with MOKO Technology Ltd

Bare Board Electrical Testing Capabilities

MOKO, as a regular part of its manufacturing process, performs electrical testing on your printed circuit boards to ensure their quality. Below please find a full explanation of how we perform these tests and what they mean. As a leading PCB manufacturer we assure you that we monitor for quality here in our own facilities, where we fabricate your boards; we are not a broker. Your order is manufactured by us and tested by us so you will know that your printed circuit boards are free of defects and meet the standards you expect.



We currently have two different types of testing equipment available to test your circuit boards; we have a number of Everett Charles ATG test machines that are flying probe, fixtureless testers and we also have universal grid testing capability. These machines use fixtures built specifically for your PCB.

Bare board testing involves using capacitance and resistance tests; each of our machines uses a combination of both. Capacitance testing for a bare board involves testing for opens and shorts by "charging" a net or plane and then probing each net to measure the induced capacity. Inaccuracies occur with this method because of the inherent variability in producing circuit boards. However field measurement or field effect testing for shorts uses a very similar approach.

Resistance testing measures the resistance found in the net. As electric current flows through a conductor collisions between electrons and atoms interfere with the flow of the electrons. This is known as resistance and it's measured in ohms.

A good conductor has LOW resistance - at common temperatures silver is the best conductor and copper is second. The amount of resistance depends on the conductor's length and its cross-sectional area. If you have two circuits of the same material and the same cross-section and one is twice as long as the other - the longer one has TWICE as much resistance. If you have two circuits of the same material and the same length but one is twice as thick as the other - the thicker conductor will have HALF the resistance.

So Resistance is proportional to length and inversely proportional to the cross-sectional area of a conductor and dissipates power in the form of heat.

MOKO' test processes use CAD/CAM data for ALL test programs and optimize both ATG and Trace test programs while meeting Class 2 requirements. We follow the IPC 9252 specification guidelines for Class 2 testing processes, which means that we test 100% of the networks on the board for continuity and isolation (that's opens and shorts) using a test program generated from your Gerber data. We do not test 100% of the points - we optimize out mid points of nets as allowed by the standard. We do not use your original Gerber data - it does not guarantee a 100% test.

Electrical Test Terminology


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