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Member's Forum Are there specific mistakes that you now intentionally test for early in new designs?
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Are there specific mistakes that you now intentionally test for early in new designs?

chloro
chloro 1 month ago

The designs that look good in the early stages often have many failures that tend to repeat themselves. I would like to know the ways in which engineers know which failure modes they can intentionally try to expose as early as possible before the design becomes costly to change.

Are there certain errors that you now intentionally test for early based on past experience (such as power sequencing assumptions, thermal margins, EMI susceptibility, connector orientation, tolerance stacking, or firmware coupling)?

More importantly, how do you set up early tests or reviews to intentionally look for these problems?

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Top Replies

  • dougw
    dougw 1 month ago +5
    Analog schematics - I check for any paths for power supply noise to reach analog signals such as any resistor or capacitor connecting a signal to a rail. Schematics in general - check for adequate decoupling…
  • wolfgangfriedrich
    wolfgangfriedrich 1 month ago in reply to OwainM +5
    When in doubt, always do this:
  • dang74
    dang74 1 month ago +4
    For PCBs, I always double check pinout and footprint for new components.
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  • dang74
    dang74 1 month ago

    For PCBs, I always double check pinout and footprint for new components.

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  • wolfgangfriedrich
    wolfgangfriedrich 1 month ago in reply to dang74

    And that is double true for connector pinout and footprints, so they get triple checked.

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  • wolfgangfriedrich
    wolfgangfriedrich 1 month ago in reply to dang74

    And that is double true for connector pinout and footprints, so they get triple checked.

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  • dang74
    dang74 1 month ago in reply to wolfgangfriedrich

    Indeed.

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  • chloro
    chloro 1 month ago in reply to wolfgangfriedrich

    It's universal ig.

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