AppNote 10831 Zero Orientation Cad Library IPC 7351B
AppNote 10831 Zero Orientation Cad Library IPC 7351B
S SM
Component Orientations
INTRODUCTION
CONTENTS
1
INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................ 1
Component Orientations
INTRODUCTION
ii
Component Orientations
INTRODUCTION
1 INTRODUCTION
1.1
Scope
To establish a consistent technique for the description of electronic component orientation, and their land
pattern geometries, that facilitates and encourages a common data capture and transfer methodology
amongst and between global trading partners.
1.2
Purpose
IPC, in conjunction with the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), have established several
standards that are in the process of being coordinated. One of the standards is on the design of land
patterns geometries (IPC-7351/IEC 61188-5-1); the other set is on electronic description for data transfer
between design and manufacturing (IPC-2581/IEC 61182-2). In order to maintain a consistent method
where these two important standards describe the component mechanical outlines, and their respective
mounting platforms, a single concept must be developed that takes into account various factors within the
global community.
One of these factors is that of establishing a CAD component description and land pattern standard that
adopts a fixed Zero Component Orientation so that all CAD images are built with the same rotation for the
purpose of assembly machine automation.
The land pattern standards clearly define all the properties necessary for standardization and
acceptability of a One World CAD Library. The main objective in defining a one world CAD library is to
achieve the highest level of Electronic Product Development Automation. This encompasses all the
processes involved from engineering to PCB layout to fabrication, assembly and test. The data format
standards need this type of consistency in order to meet the efficiency that electronic data transfer can
bring to the industry.
Many large firms have spent millions of dollars creating and implementing their own unique standards for
their own Electronic Product Development Automation. These standards are proprietary to each firm
and are not openly shared with the rest of the industry. This has resulted in massive duplication of effort
costing the industry millions of man hours in waste and creating industry chaos and global nonstandardization.
The industry associations responsible for component descriptions and tape and reel orientation have tried
valiantly to influence the industry by making good standards that describe the component outlines and
how they should be positioned in the delivery system to the equipment on the manufacturing floor.
Suppliers of parts have either not adhered to the recommendations or have misunderstood the intent and
provided their products in different orientations.
The Land pattern standards (both IPC-7351 and IEC 61188-5-1) put an end to the Proprietary Intellectual
Property and introduce a world standard so every electronics firm can benefit from Electronic Product
Development Automation. The data format standards (IPC-2581 and IEC 61182-2) are an open database
XML software code that is neutral to all the various CAD ASCII formats. For true machine automation to
exist, the world desperately needs a neutral CAD database format that all PCB manufacturing machines
can read.
The main purpose of creating the land pattern standards is to achieve reliable solder joint formation
platforms; the reason for developing the data transfer structure is to improve the efficiency with which
engineering intelligence is converted to manufacturing reality. Even if the neutral CAD format can drive all
the manufacturing machines, it would be meaningless unless the component description standard for
CAD land patterns was implemented with some consistency. Zero Component Orientation has a key role
in machine automation.
Component Orientations
INTRODUCTION
The obvious choice for global standardization for EE hardware engineering, PCB design layout,
manufacturing, assembly and testing processes is to incorporate the standard land pattern conventions.
Any other option continues the confusion and additional manual hours of intervention in order to achieve
the goals of automation. In addition, the ease of having one system export a file so that another system
can accomplish the work may require unnecessary manipulation of the neutral format in order to meet the
object of clear, unambiguous software code.
The design of any assembly will continue to permit arrangement and orientation of components at any
orientation consistent with design standards. Starting from a commonly understood data capture concept
will benefit the entire supply chain.
Component Orientations
CHIP COMPONENTS
2 CHIP COMPONENTS
2.1
Chip Capacitor
Pin 1 on Left Side
Component
2.2
Land Pattern
Chip Resistor
Pin 1 on Left Side
Component
2.3
Land Pattern
Chip Inductor
Pin 1 on Left Side
Component
Land Pattern
Component Orientations
MOLDED COMPONENTS
3 MOLDED COMPONENTS
3.1
Molded Capacitors
Pin 1 on Left Side
Component
3.2
Land Pattern
Molded Diodes
Pin 1 on Left Side (Cathode)
Component
3.3
Land Pattern
Molded Inductors
Pin 1 on Left Side
Component
Land Pattern
Component Orientations
PRECSION WIRE-WOUND
4 PRECSION WIRE-WOUND
4.1
Component
Land Pattern
Component Orientations
MELF COMPONENTS
5 MELF COMPONENTS
5.1
MELF Diodes
Pin 1 on Left Side (Cathode)
Component
5.2
Land Pattern
MELF Resistors
Pin 1 on Left Side
Component
Land Pattern
Component Orientations
MELF COMPONENTS
Component Orientations
Component
Pin 1 on Left Side
Land Pattern
Component Orientations
SOT COMPONENTS
7 SOT COMPONENTS
7.1
SOT23-3
Pin 1 on Upper Left
Component
7.2
Land Pattern
SOT23-5
Pin 1 on Upper Left
Component
7.3
Land Pattern
SOT343
Pin 1 on Upper Left
Component
7.4
Land Pattern
SOT223
Pin 1 on Upper Left
Component
Land Pattern
Component Orientations
TO COMPONENTS
8 TO COMPONENTS
8.1
TO252 (DPAK)
Component
Land Pattern
10
Component Orientations
Component
9.2
Land Pattern
TSSOP
Component
Pin 1 on Upper Left
Land Pattern
11
Component Orientations
Component
Land Pattern
12
Component
Land Pattern
Component
Land Pattern
13
Component
Land Pattern
Component
Land Pattern
14
Component
Land Pattern
15
Component
Land Pattern
16
Component
Land Pattern
Component
Land Pattern
17
Component
Land Pattern
18
Land Pattern
Land Pattern
Land Pattern
19
Component Orientations
Land Pattern
Land Pattern
20
Component Orientations
21