-
- News
- Books
Featured Books
- smt007 Magazine
Latest Issues
Current IssueIPC APEX EXPO 2024 Pre-show
This month’s issue devotes its pages to a comprehensive preview of the IPC APEX EXPO 2024 event. Whether your role is technical or business, if you're new-to-the-industry or seasoned veteran, you'll find value throughout this program.
Boost Your Sales
Every part of your business can be evaluated as a process, including your sales funnel. Optimizing your selling process requires a coordinated effort between marketing and sales. In this issue, industry experts in marketing and sales offer their best advice on how to boost your sales efforts.
The Cost of Rework
In this issue, we investigate rework's current state of the art. What are the root causes and how are they resolved? What is the financial impact of rework, and is it possible to eliminate it entirely without sacrificing your yields?
- Articles
- Columns
Search Console
- Links
- Events
||| MENU - smt007 Magazine
Electroplating System Suits Research Prototyping
February 1, 2007 |Estimated reading time: Less than a minute
WILSONVILLE, Ore. LPKF Laser & Electronics developed the MiniContac RS reverse pulse plating (RPP) system for professional production of prototype and small-batch production PCBs. The desktop system is completely enclosed without external connections and performs rapid PCB prototyping, small runs, and research-laboratory production work.
RPP technology reportedly allows uniform metal distribution to improve aspect ratios. The machine can plate holes as small as 0.2-mm vias in 62-mil-thick standard PCBs. Plating is said to be smooth, and thin or fragile materials are supported by an incorporated framework. The menu-driven control system is semiautomated. Circuit boards as large as 230 × 330 mm, double-sided, or multilayer can be used. The process uses safe chemicals in a clean production process, said Jim Greene, VP for North America. It has four replaceable tanks; the company disposes of all plating chemicals for customers.