PTS Coupons for TH Process Control
PTS Coupons for TH Process Control
The parametric test system (PTS) was created by Hewlett-Packard’s Printed Circuit Division in 1987 based on early H-P coupons used in production since 1972. Those early coupons focused on inner-layer shifting, by using the copper on I/Ls shorting to a PTH, moiré patterns, and hole quality cross-sections. Additional influence came from a parametric printed circuit board used as a training and process vehicle for the first NanYa PCB Facility in Taiwan (circa 1983). This PCB had various design-rule technologies on it and provided feedback on how the process was improving.
The H-P PTS was a group of seven coupons that could be placed on production panels or used on parametric panels to provide a snapshot of the capability of the processes. The initial seven coupons (Figure 1) were designed to test:
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(a) Outer-layer registration
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(b) Inner-layer registration and shifting
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(c) Conductors/pads open and shorts
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(d) Plated through-hole and I/L conductors continuity
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(e) Artwork defects
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(f) Soldermask registration
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(g) Etch factors
Preparing RecommendationsThe coupons were all designed to be tested by facility continuity testers using a bed-of-nails open-short testing machine. In H-P’s case, the tester was an ATG2000 grid tester. The testers fault-file was captured by an H-P workstation and stored. Each coupon had a stored perfect response or netlist that was compared to the fault file and the opens and shorts were translated to dimensional shifts or other parametric data. The RS/1 statistics program was used to produce control charts and statistical reports, as well as historic data. To provide for process control, the coupons were reduced in size and small stand-alone coupon testers were built to allow operators to check the process immediately as a confidence indicator. These home-built milliohm meters worked with a simple 1-amphere power brick, a 4-digit digital panel meter and a machined-Plexiglas coupon holder with 8-spring-loaded gold pins wired to a 4-position rotary switch in a 4-wire Kelvin measurement scheme.
The Gerber artwork for these 7 PTS coupons are in the ZIP file at the end of this BLOG.

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