I realize I can make vias in the actual PCB layout. But then, I have to do it for every part I want via stitching in and if I want to do this with another PCB design, I have to put vias into the PCB for that too. Isn't it preferable to make a part with it built in and then you can lay out that part as many times as you wish?
What if you don't need vias? What if you need a few in odd positions?
One of those either-or situations where you need to maintain more footprints, or always do it by hand. YMMV, but most tools you can simply copy and paste vias, so it's easier repeating them than making and maintaining footprints.
I was using adapter boards that I have seen with stitching as my guide, like this one below. I use these. They work fine for prototyping.
[pic]
But just go around the edges? On the ones above, just lay down the outermost ring of vias and forget the rest? To prevent solder from flowing through? I was probably going to build this by hand with a hot air gun anyway...
Those can't be done otherwise, for a few reasons:
- You can't connect to a buried pad with anything else
- It's for heat dissipation (usually), so you aren't getting the heat out any other way
- On a proto board, you'll probably be hand soldering it, so you need the vias to wick solder to do the job (or you can reflow, but in that case you can control the amount of excess solder). Reliability probably doesn't matter either.
- On a production board, you use small vias (12 mils or less), which have less tendancy to wick solder. You can also design in enough excess solder, and the right number of vias, with the intent that the excess solder wicks into them. Otherwise, a flat build (no wicking) should use less than full pad area for solder. This is usually shown on the footprint drawing.
There's no room for vias around the pad, or that would obstruct what routing area you might have, anyway.
Likewise, LGAs and BGAs have such density that you have no choice but to use a "dogbone" or ViP fanout. Especially for these, you want to avoid ViP unless you're going to use a capped or filled via process (added steps = added expense). (Tenting isn't good enough, especially double side tenting, because the hollow via will inevitably trap gas.)
So it's different for pads that have accessibility around them. You can place vias very near (even tangent with, but not inside) the pad, tented or otherwise (preferably tented so they don't steal solder), and don't have to worry about wicking or gas bubbles. Place a copper polygon around pad and vias, top and bottom.
There's little point in using vias if you aren't going to put copper on the bottom. In that case, just leave as much extra copper on the top as you can.
Tim