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Michael A. Terrell Michael A. Terrell is offline
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Default A specific PCB bad practise, term for it ?


Jim Yanik wrote:

"N_Cook" wrote in :

Where holes are drilled for thru-board components but of diameter far
too big , thru-hole plated , but no eyelet/inserts used to fill the
gap. So 1N4001 size leads in holes twice their diameter and 1N4148 in
holes twice their diameter. So not a case of only one drill size for
all. So in area terms about 1 to 4 ratio of lead to solder. Bad
enough practise with proper solder but with PbF, ring cracks starting
all over. Is it to avoid mutiny by the by-hand board populators ?




perhaps PCBs designed for machine parts insertion have those sort of
"oversize" thru-holes? Perhaps the insertion machine prefers big holes and
besides,they crimp over the leads anyways.



Microdyne stopped bending the leads or using the special cutters that
cripmed the leads back in the '80s to reduced damage to the PTH.


Maybe it's too much trouble to
drill PCBs for different size thru-holes,and/or not worth the effort.



It's more likely that there was no design review, or the cad operator
was too lazy to verify the hole sizes.


certainly stocking and inserting eyelets would be an additional,unnecessary
expense.



--
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