Good afternoon, all,
What is the best way to designate a slot to be plated through?
Essentially, I need an oval shaped hole that's plated through.
Eagle v7.7.0.
Ideas?
Thanks,
- Chuck
Good afternoon, all,
What is the best way to designate a slot to be plated through?
Essentially, I need an oval shaped hole that's plated through.
Eagle v7.7.0.
Ideas?
Thanks,
- Chuck
On 04/18/2018 04:38 PM, Chuck Huber wrote:
Good afternoon, all,
What is the best way to designate a slot to be plated through?
Essentially, I need an oval shaped hole that's plated through.
Eagle v7.7.0.
Ideas?
Thanks,
- Chuck
Talk to your board house on how they want it.
Add slot or oval to milling layer and add polygons for copper.
Send notes to the effect of what you want before you order.
Paul
On 18.04.2018 22:38, Chuck Huber wrote:
Good afternoon, all,
What is the best way to designate a slot to be plated through?
Essentially, I need an oval shaped hole that's plated through.
Eagle v7.7.0.
Ideas?
Thanks,
- Chuck
Ive done this quite a few times (Eagle 7.7.0). It works best on library
parts because then you can control each layer in the same go. Adding a
milled slot directly on the board requires careful planned routing
around and under it.
In the package editor, I start with a pad somewhere at one corner/end of
the slot. If you set the pad hole size to the mill width, you can get a
better impression how much copper you need around the slot. Then I add
the mill shape over the pin. In some cases a oblong pad may be the
correct shape, but if not, I draw a polygon on each of the 16 layers,
even if Im only using just a few of them. Make sure the polygons
generates a "rest edge" as large as the rest-ring of the pad. Always add
stop and paste layers to polygon pads. You may disalbe the pad's stop
and paste, but they should ideally merge with the one you draw.
Remember to send the gerbers of the mill layer and write a doc how to
use it.
The manufacturer will most likely understand that milled patterns in the
middle of all-layers copper island should be plated, but you better add
it to the docs too.
Note:If you embed the slots in polygons, the fill thermals maybe have
some connection issues with polygon pads. Make sure they look ok, or
disable thermals of the polygons. Also note the added heat required to
solder these slots.
On 18.04.2018 22:38, Chuck Huber wrote:
Good afternoon, all,
What is the best way to designate a slot to be plated through?
Essentially, I need an oval shaped hole that's plated through.
Eagle v7.7.0.
Ideas?
Thanks,
- Chuck
Ive done this quite a few times (Eagle 7.7.0). It works best on library
parts because then you can control each layer in the same go. Adding a
milled slot directly on the board requires careful planned routing
around and under it.
In the package editor, I start with a pad somewhere at one corner/end of
the slot. If you set the pad hole size to the mill width, you can get a
better impression how much copper you need around the slot. Then I add
the mill shape over the pin. In some cases a oblong pad may be the
correct shape, but if not, I draw a polygon on each of the 16 layers,
even if Im only using just a few of them. Make sure the polygons
generates a "rest edge" as large as the rest-ring of the pad. Always add
stop and paste layers to polygon pads. You may disalbe the pad's stop
and paste, but they should ideally merge with the one you draw.
Remember to send the gerbers of the mill layer and write a doc how to
use it.
The manufacturer will most likely understand that milled patterns in the
middle of all-layers copper island should be plated, but you better add
it to the docs too.
Note:If you embed the slots in polygons, the fill thermals maybe have
some connection issues with polygon pads. Make sure they look ok, or
disable thermals of the polygons. Also note the added heat required to
solder these slots.
On 04/19/2018 07:42 AM, Morten Leikvoll wrote:
On 18.04.2018 22:38, Chuck Huber wrote:
Good afternoon, all,
What is the best way to designate a slot to be plated through?
Essentially, I need an oval shaped hole that's plated through.
Eagle v7.7.0.
Ideas?
Thanks,
- Chuck
Ive done this quite a few times (Eagle 7.7.0). It works best on
library parts because then you can control each layer in the same go.
Adding a milled slot directly on the board requires careful planned
routing around and under it.
In the package editor, I start with a pad somewhere at one corner/end
of the slot. If you set the pad hole size to the mill width, you can
get a better impression how much copper you need around the slot. Then
I add the mill shape over the pin. In some cases a oblong pad may be
the correct shape, but if not, I draw a polygon on each of the 16
layers, even if Im only using just a few of them. Make sure the
polygons generates a "rest edge" as large as the rest-ring of the pad.
Always add stop and paste layers to polygon pads. You may disalbe the
pad's stop and paste, but they should ideally merge with the one you
draw.
Remember to send the gerbers of the mill layer and write a doc how to
use it.
The manufacturer will most likely understand that milled patterns in
the middle of all-layers copper island should be plated, but you
better add it to the docs too.
Note:If you embed the slots in polygons, the fill thermals maybe have
some connection issues with polygon pads. Make sure they look ok, or
disable thermals of the polygons. Also note the added heat required to
solder these slots.
Good morning, Morton and Paul,
That's about what I was thinking as well. I hadn't thought about
putting a manual rest ring in on all layers, nor the mask. The pad
confirming the finished hole size is another good idea. All good ideas.
I agree with the problems of using the milling layer on the board. It's
very easy to overlook a trace crossing over it - I've don't it. As
such, I use the dimension layer for non-plated slots to allow the DRC to
catch such errors.
The copper around the slot and a note in the README should queue the
board house to route the slot prior to plating, or at least to call me
if they're left scratching their heads.
Thanks,
- Chuck
On 04/19/2018 07:42 AM, Morten Leikvoll wrote:
On 18.04.2018 22:38, Chuck Huber wrote:
Good afternoon, all,
What is the best way to designate a slot to be plated through?
Essentially, I need an oval shaped hole that's plated through.
Eagle v7.7.0.
Ideas?
Thanks,
- Chuck
Ive done this quite a few times (Eagle 7.7.0). It works best on
library parts because then you can control each layer in the same go.
Adding a milled slot directly on the board requires careful planned
routing around and under it.
In the package editor, I start with a pad somewhere at one corner/end
of the slot. If you set the pad hole size to the mill width, you can
get a better impression how much copper you need around the slot. Then
I add the mill shape over the pin. In some cases a oblong pad may be
the correct shape, but if not, I draw a polygon on each of the 16
layers, even if Im only using just a few of them. Make sure the
polygons generates a "rest edge" as large as the rest-ring of the pad.
Always add stop and paste layers to polygon pads. You may disalbe the
pad's stop and paste, but they should ideally merge with the one you
draw.
Remember to send the gerbers of the mill layer and write a doc how to
use it.
The manufacturer will most likely understand that milled patterns in
the middle of all-layers copper island should be plated, but you
better add it to the docs too.
Note:If you embed the slots in polygons, the fill thermals maybe have
some connection issues with polygon pads. Make sure they look ok, or
disable thermals of the polygons. Also note the added heat required to
solder these slots.
Good morning, Morton and Paul,
That's about what I was thinking as well. I hadn't thought about
putting a manual rest ring in on all layers, nor the mask. The pad
confirming the finished hole size is another good idea. All good ideas.
I agree with the problems of using the milling layer on the board. It's
very easy to overlook a trace crossing over it - I've don't it. As
such, I use the dimension layer for non-plated slots to allow the DRC to
catch such errors.
The copper around the slot and a note in the README should queue the
board house to route the slot prior to plating, or at least to call me
if they're left scratching their heads.
Thanks,
- Chuck