Close Only Counts …

I think this one has both some land pattern issues and some schematic issues. It’s unfortunately pretty common to see footprints that are close, but not close enough to work. Looking at the data sheet here, there may be a schematic issue as well. The only connections on to the part on this board are ground and P3. I don’t know the part, so I suppose it’s possible that all it needs is P3 and ground, but it looks more like a case of the footprint being wrong and the pin connections being wrong. Pins 1, 2, 3, 5 and 7 are all ground, but on the board, 1 and 3 go some place else. Bummer.

Making custom CAD parts can be pretty annoying and it seems to be a function disproportionately prone to error. Why is that?

Duane Benson
in horse shoes, hand grenades and sometimes atom bombs

http://blog.screamingcircuits.com/

Inverted QFN Land Pattern

Ever experienced the heartbreak of inverted land pattern? It’s not supposed to happen, but every now and then, it does. Maybe something happened when creating a custom footprint. Maybe, somehow it got
inverted in the CAD software and then placed on the wrong surface layer.

Maybe it was a subliminal attempt to make up for those giant open vias in the thermal pad. Who knows. But, it happened, so now what?

You could re-spin the whole board. Ugh. That’s, like, wasteful and stuff. Certainly, if this is a production build, you’ll have to re-spin. For some prototype applications, like if it’s a high frequency or RF thingy, you may very well have to get a new set of PCBs fabbed, too.

But, sometimes in the prototype world, you may be able to salvage the board run. We used to do stuff like this all the time with through-hole parts — need an extra chip, just dead bug hang it on up there.

Flip the chip over and use some small gauge wire — maybe wire-wrap wire — and hand-wire to the upside down chip. Gluing it down first may be helpful. Just keep in mind that since the thermal pad isn’t soldered to the board, you will lose some thermal performance. Maybe solder a small heat sink on it or something. And don’t forget to wire that pad to ground too (if it’s supposed to be grounded).

Duane Benson
Just put it on the seventh surface of your tesseract and it will fit right.

http://blog.screamingcircuits.com/