Praise for OurPCB

Hand tools, soldering irons, scopes, multimeters. Talk about em HERE!

Moderators: adafruit_support_bill, adafruit

Please be positive and constructive with your questions and comments.
Locked
uscjeremy
 
Posts: 6
Joined: Wed Dec 02, 2009 10:42 pm

Praise for OurPCB

Post by uscjeremy »

LadyAda has a nice review of PCB manufacturers (http://www.ladyada.net/library/pcb/manufacturers.html). She briefly mentions OurPCB, but I'd like to give them a somewhat more detailed and positive review. (I am not affiliated with them at all, except for having ordered from them.)

This was my first PCB ever so I wasn't sure what to expect. I spent a long time researching my fab options. I decided on OurPCB because their value seemed to be the best by a long shot: $50 setup plus about $0.15 per square inch for dual-layer boards with solderstop and silkscreening on both sides, with 10-day production time. They're in China, so another $40 for 2-day shipping. That worked out to about $110 shipped for Qty 10 6.5"x3" boards. Plus they even give you 4/4 mil width and spacing, which most places don't. It's hard to find a company that will produce boards of that size, in that quantity, for that price; the ones that come close don't have solderstop or silkscreening, or have larger minimum feature sizes.

The boards they produced were beautiful:

http://www.circlemud.org/~jelson/rocket ... 0Front.jpg
http://www.circlemud.org/~jelson/rocket ... 20Back.jpg

(If possible, try to suppress snarky comments regarding my dumb routing that uses vias like they're going out of style. This was my first board, and it's mostly auto-routed using Eagle.)

The boards pictured use 8 mil traces, but a 2nd revision used 6 mil traces; I've soldered together about 15 of them so far without any failures. They're both pretty and robust. The solderstop makes them incredibly easy to solder; a friend who had never soldered anything put one together after about 5 minutes of practice.

They have no automated order system, which is good or bad, depending on whether you like talking to humans. You email them your Gerbers, and they email you back a price quote. If you approve, you paypal them money.

If you need PCBs tomorrow, they're not a good choice due to the long lead time. But for DIY projects I've been very happy with them.

They also do pick&place assembly but I haven't used that service.

Cheers,
--Jeremy

dsula
 
Posts: 1
Joined: Mon Dec 10, 2012 8:44 pm

Re: Praise for OurPCB

Post by dsula »

I did a turnkey assembly job of 100 PCBs with OurPCB recently and this is my findings:

1. high quality 4 layer board
2. high quality silkscreen
3. 2 out of 100 PCBs had solder issues with QFN parts
4. excellent price for PCB
5. excellent price for assembly
6. excellent price for parts
7. When you submit a BOM the people take the time to find cheaper alternativ parts which you can accept or reject.
8. Very long assembly lead time and lack of communication.
9. Some counterfeit parts were used. This is unfortunate and a killer for any future parts procuring through OurPCB. I don't know if OurPCB knowingly uses fake parts or if they get screwed by some local supplier.

So my recommendation: don't let them procur parts. Or at least have them disclose the suppliers they are using and only proceed if they buy from authorized distributors of the parts in question.

User avatar
adafruit_support_mike
 
Posts: 67446
Joined: Thu Feb 11, 2010 2:51 pm

Re: Praise for OurPCB

Post by adafruit_support_mike »

uscjeremy wrote:(If possible, try to suppress snarky comments regarding my dumb routing that uses vias like they're going out of style. This was my first board, and it's mostly auto-routed using Eagle.)
Hey, routing is an art form.. anyone who snarks is just refusing to admit the messes in their own "learning to do it" pile. ;-)
uscjeremy wrote:The boards pictured use 8 mil traces, but a 2nd revision used 6 mil traces;
That's getting a little thin actually..

Most PCB fabs prefer a 12/12 pitch: 12 mil traces with 12 mil of space between them. Going smaller than about 10/10 increases the odds of broken traces or shorts between traces, so the price for making the boards goes up.

From what I see in the pictures, you could probably go up to 12/12 (or 16/16) without any trouble. It won't hurt the layout, and might make the boards cheaper. The general goal is to use the widest traces and spacing you can, shrinking them only when other constraints force you to.

User avatar
dmpyron
 
Posts: 75
Joined: Mon Dec 10, 2012 11:14 am

Re: Praise for OurPCB

Post by dmpyron »

[email protected] wrote:
uscjeremy wrote:(If possible, try to suppress snarky comments regarding my dumb routing that uses vias like they're going out of style. This was my first board, and it's mostly auto-routed using Eagle.)
Hey, routing is an art form.. anyone who snarks is just refusing to admit the messes in their own "learning to do it" pile. ;-)
Hey, the "big guys" pay a couple of a hundred thousand a seat for auto routers, then pay folks to fix the problems. Just be glad you're not doing an eight layer IC.
[email protected] wrote:
uscjeremy wrote:The boards pictured use 8 mil traces, but a 2nd revision used 6 mil traces;
That's getting a little thin actually..

Most PCB fabs prefer a 12/12 pitch: 12 mil traces with 12 mil of space between them. Going smaller than about 10/10 increases the odds of broken traces or shorts between traces, so the price for making the boards goes up.
Most places have design rules to protect against those problems because somebody has to pay to fix them, and it's always "your" fault (customer or fab). So you have design rules and DRC (design rules checking).

I guess at the prices we're paying for these boards, LVS (layout vs schematic) is probably too expensive to put into what is usually free software and the boards aren't so intricate that it can't be done visually.
[email protected] wrote: From what I see in the pictures, you could probably go up to 12/12 (or 16/16) without any trouble. It won't hurt the layout, and might make the boards cheaper. The general goal is to use the widest traces and spacing you can, shrinking them only when other constraints force you to.
As long as you don't go too far over your real estate budget for the board, 12/12 or bigger is usually the best choice. It also makes going "thinner" here and there easier. And easier is always a good thing.

gorilla2013
 
Posts: 1
Joined: Mon Apr 22, 2013 4:07 am

Re: Praise for OurPCB

Post by gorilla2013 »

Hi,

I have just recently used OurPCB service. I gave them a mirrored gerber files (which includes the GTL, GBL and soldermask files) and they end up produce a mirrored PCB. I always thought the GTL and GBL gives an indication of the top and bottom layers of the PCB but they didn't picked it up. I was hoping if they have received a mirrored file at least they could have indicate to me that they can't use it.

I have used PCBCart and they used mirrored files without any issues. Other PCB manufacturers will actually indicate the gerber files has to be not mirrored.

Paul

User avatar
pjchooch
 
Posts: 3
Joined: Fri Feb 06, 2015 10:41 am

Re: Praise for OurPCB

Post by pjchooch »

We (my company) has been using OurPCB for a several years now. We use them for board fab and fab/assembly jobs (we always supply parts to assure the supply chain).

Their prices are really good, and that's why we have stuck with them over time. The quality of the boards and assembly has always been good.

They are not, however, reliable from a scheduling perspective. 10-day turn jobs consistently turn into 30+ days. We have learned to never do time-sensitive work with them (I am currently waiting for a 10-day board job that they have been working on for almost a month now).

Several times we have ordered boards, only to have them make the wrong version, then have to remake them.

Communication is also a weak spot. I takes constant emailing to get any kind of status update. I once had a large assembly order with them that they shipped, but was sitting in customs in China awaiting more detail from the shipper (OurPCB) for two weeks. I finally got them to supply me a tracking number, and I found that it was stuck. Once I let OurPCB know, they took another 2-days to get the information forwarded and the shipment released.

As this point, I have moved all assembly jobs to another vendor, and we are letting OurPCB do board-only jobs for our existing designs. This is mainly to save setup fees, though the benefit of low prices is being outweighed by their terrible performance.

User avatar
jonathansfl
 
Posts: 10
Joined: Thu Feb 13, 2014 5:51 pm

Re: Praise for OurPCB

Post by jonathansfl »

pjchooch: Who did you move to for your assembly projects? we need time-sensitive performance, not lengthy delays.

User avatar
pjchooch
 
Posts: 3
Joined: Fri Feb 06, 2015 10:41 am

Re: Praise for OurPCB

Post by pjchooch »

For a time we went with Bittele (http://www.7pcb.com/). Their boards were very good quality, and they provide very good order tracking with good prices. They were slightly more expensive, the the reduction in heartburn was well worth it.

Eventually, however, I bought a PnP machine, and have been doing most of my own board building. This allows us to build as needed and reduce overstock.

User avatar
DigitalNighthawk
 
Posts: 1
Joined: Thu Apr 28, 2016 5:41 pm

Re: Praise for OurPCB

Post by DigitalNighthawk »

PJChooch: Could you ballpark how much more expensive it was going to Bittele over OurPCB? I'd love to have boards done in the US but have found turnkey pricing to generally be about 3-10x more expensive domestically vs in China. Given a somewhat complex design that has to go through multiple iterations, it is hard to justify the additional cost.

User avatar
pjchooch
 
Posts: 3
Joined: Fri Feb 06, 2015 10:41 am

Re: Praise for OurPCB

Post by pjchooch »

I do not have solid numbers in front of me, but I think it was something like 5-10% more, but the boards also came with gold flash by default (wasn't expecting it really), so that might make up the difference.

They will turn around a quote very quickly. The online tool quote was not as good as the actual quote, IIRC.

Locked
Please be positive and constructive with your questions and comments.

Return to “Tools Tools Tools”