| Quietly, HDPUG Gaining Members, Performing Research |
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| Written by Mike Buetow | |
| Thursday, 17 January 2013 15:54 | |
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Operating mostly under the radar -- although not necessarily by design -- the High Density Packaging Users Group in now well into its second decade of pushing electronics manufacturing technology forward. Executive director Marshall Andrews is no stranger to consortia work: He spent about 12 years at MCC, the US-based computer consortium, and later was the founding CEO of ITRI, a consortium for promoting and enhancing printed circuit board fabricators and technology. He spoke with editor in chief Mike Buetow this week. MB: What’s the current membership count? MB: How stable is the membership? There’s different kinds of members. The core is mainly OEMs who have been members almost since Day 1. That includes Cisco and Juniper, Oracle; Celestica has also been with us a long time. Dell was in for a long time, left for a year or two, then picked back up again. MB: Who drives the programming? MB: How are you defining “packaging” these days? In other words, where does the scope of your work start and stop? MB: You share many members with iNEMI. How do you coordinate with that organization? For example, we did that with our halogen-free cables project. iNEMI had a [halogen-free project], but it was entirely different than ours. We have done that on several projects. When we are outlining a project, we go through a process were we define it, and we are very open about what we are planning. We try to hunt down duplications. We put a lot of emphasis on that. Our members also work with iNEMI, the Universal Consortium, Georgia Tech and others. MB: Has anything you learned from your ITRI days informed what you are doing now? MB: Tell me a bit about your current projects. MB: Could you give us an example of something HDP is currently working on? Now, I want to note that in setting all these requirements, we don’t use pass/fail criteria. Some applications don’t require all the strenuous performance attributes we put into these specifications. So doing it that way helps the member understand, “I don’t need all this [performance]; I can go down a layer or two and save some money with some lower-cost materials.” That was a strong payback. It also gave very good direction to the materials suppliers, so they could improve their products. A number of suppliers participated. We evaluated 20 to 30 materials in each round. All were multilayer laminates, and we used six and 20 layers boards, because we focused mainly on high performance. MB: Who sets the specifications for performance for this project? MB: Were the testing protocols based on industry standard or specific to the project? MB: Do you give feedback to the standards organizations? MB: How long does the typical project take? MB: In the course of your projects, how do you account for regional variances in the manufacturing environment? A facility in a high humidity locale might have different results than one elsewhere, for example. MB: HDP is quite a bit smaller than other trade groups. Does that affect your ability to get things done?
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| Last Updated on Monday, 21 January 2013 00:59 |
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