PCB assembly services convert a bare printed circuit board into a tested PCBA by combining solder paste printing, component placement, reflow soldering, through-hole integration, inspection, testing, traceability, and production documentation. For engineers, good printed circuit board assembly is not only “mounting parts.” It is a controlled manufacturing service that checks Gerber files, BOM risk, centroid data, solder paste volume, placement accuracy, reflow profile, THT solder fill, BGA X-ray results, ICT access, functional test coverage, and final acceptance under standards such as IPC J-STD-001 and IPC-A-610. IPC describes J-STD-001 as the industry-consensus standard for soldering processes and materials, while IPC-A-610 is used for post-assembly acceptance of electronic assemblies.
Learn more about: What Is PCB Assembly
Printed Circuit Board Assembly
Service Scope
Printed Circuit Board Assembly, or PCBA, starts after the bare PCB is fabricated. The assembly supplier receives manufacturing files, purchases or receives components, prepares SMT and THT process programs, builds the board, inspects solder joints, and tests the final circuit card assembly.
A complete PCB assembly service normally includes:
- Engineering file review
- BOM and AVL checking
- Component sourcing or receiving
- Solder stencil design
- SMT programming
- Solder paste printing
- Component placement
- Reflow soldering
- Through-hole assembly
- Selective or wave soldering
- AOI, X-ray, ICT, and functional testing
- Cleaning, coating, labeling, and packing when required
PCB, PCBA, and PCA
The terms PCB, PCBA, and PCA are often mixed, but factories treat them differently.
| Term | Production Meaning | Engineering Control |
|---|---|---|
| PCB | Bare board before components | Copper, drilling, solder mask, surface finish |
| PCBA | Board after components are assembled | SMT, THT, soldering, inspection, testing |
| PCA | Printed circuit assembly, often same as PCBA | Functional assembly and test record |
| Circuit card assembly | Industrial name for an assembled board | Traceability and final quality control |
| PCB manufacturing and assembly | Full service from fabrication to PCBA | Fabrication, sourcing, assembly, test |
IPC-6012 covers qualification and performance requirements for rigid printed boards, so it applies before assembly, while IPC J-STD-001 and IPC-A-610 apply to soldering process and assembled-board acceptance.
PCBA Process
Process Flow
A standard PCBA process follows a controlled sequence. The exact order changes for double-sided SMT, mixed THT, BGA, press-fit, coating, or box-build projects.
Typical flow:
- Review Gerber, BOM, centroid, stackup, and assembly drawings.
- Check component availability and package risk.
- Design and fabricate the SMT stencil.
- Print solder paste on PCB pads.
- Inspect paste volume with SPI when required.
- Place SMT components.
- Reflow solder the SMT side.
- Inspect with AOI and X-ray where needed.
- Insert THT components.
- Use wave, selective, or manual soldering.
- Perform ICT, flying probe, or functional testing.
- Clean, coat, label, and pack the finished PCBA.
Core Process Parameters
| Process Step | Typical Parameter | Factory Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Stencil thickness | 0.10-0.15 mm common | Controls paste volume |
| Fine-pitch stencil | 0.08-0.10 mm by review | Supports QFN, BGA, 0201 parts |
| Placement accuracy | ±25-50 microns common | Controls fine-pitch alignment |
| Lead-free reflow peak | 235-250 C typical | Melts SAC solder alloy |
| Time above liquidus | 45-90 seconds common | Controls wetting and intermetallic formation |
| THT hole clearance | Lead diameter + 0.15-0.30 mm | Enables insertion and solder fill |
| Barrel fill target | Often 75% or higher by class | Supports electrical and mechanical strength |
These numbers are common production ranges, not universal limits. The final process window depends on solder alloy, component thermal rating, PCB thickness, copper weight, board finish, package type, and IPC class.
Solder Paste Application
Stencil Printing
Solder paste application is the first major SMT control point. A stencil transfers solder paste to component pads. Paste volume must match pad geometry, aperture design, stencil thickness, surface finish, component package, and reflow behavior.
Key controls:
- Stencil thickness: 0.10-0.15 mm for many SMT boards
- Reduced apertures for QFN thermal pads
- Step stencil for mixed fine-pitch and large connector boards
- Area ratio above about 0.66 for stable paste release
- Paste temperature stabilization before printing
- Paste working life control on the stencil
- SPI for volume, height, offset, and bridge risk
Paste Defect Control
Paste defects often create downstream solder failures. Too little paste causes opens and weak joints. Too much paste causes bridges, solder balls, tombstoning, and BGA voids.
Common paste controls:
- Check stencil underside cleaning interval.
- Keep board support flat during printing.
- Use local support pins under thin PCBs.
- Avoid large uncovered paste apertures under QFN thermal pads.
- Review paste aperture reduction for 0.4 mm and 0.5 mm pitch parts.
- Use SPI alarms for repeated low-volume or high-volume areas.
Component Placement
Pick-and-Place Setup
Component placement uses automated machines to place resistors, capacitors, ICs, connectors, crystals, sensors, LEDs, BGAs, and other SMT parts. The machine uses the centroid file, feeder setup, fiducial recognition, nozzle selection, package libraries, and vision alignment.
Placement inputs:
- Pick-and-place centroid data
- BOM with manufacturer part numbers
- Assembly drawing
- Component rotation convention
- Fiducial locations
- Feeder setup list
- Package height and polarity
- Nozzle and placement pressure settings
Placement Risk Points
Placement defects usually come from data mismatch, wrong rotation, unstable feeders, poor fiducials, or package library errors.
Factory checks should include:
- First article inspection before batch production
- Polarity check for LEDs, diodes, electrolytic capacitors, and ICs
- Rotation check for QFN, BGA, connectors, and modules
- Feeder verification by part number
- Vision-library verification for odd-form parts
- Placement pressure review for fragile components
For small parts such as 0201 and 01005, placement accuracy and paste balance must work together. A perfect placement on uneven paste can still tombstone during reflow.
Reflow Soldering
Thermal Profile
Reflow soldering heats the assembly through preheat, soak, liquidus, peak, and cooling zones. The profile must melt solder without damaging components, warping the board, or creating poor wetting.
| Reflow Stage | Typical Lead-Free Range | Process Role |
|---|---|---|
| Preheat ramp | 1-3 C per second | Reduces thermal shock |
| Soak zone | 150-180 C for 60-120 seconds | Activates flux and equalizes temperature |
| Time above liquidus | 45-90 seconds | Forms solder joints |
| Peak temperature | 235-250 C | Completes lead-free solder melting |
| Cooling rate | 2-4 C per second | Controls grain structure and stress |
Reflow Process Control
Reflow cannot use one profile for every board. A 0.8 mm thick sensor board, a 1.6 mm industrial controller, and a 2.4 mm high-current power board need different profiles.
Profile controls:
- Thermocouple measurement on hot and cold spots
- BGA corner temperature check
- Connector body temperature limit
- QFN voiding review
- Heavy copper heat absorption check
- Double-sided reflow component drop risk
- Moisture-sensitive component bake control
Through-Hole Integration
THT Assembly Role
Through-Hole Technology is used when components need stronger mechanical support or higher current capacity than SMT alone can provide. Common THT parts include terminal blocks, relays, transformers, electrolytic capacitors, power inductors, headers, USB shell tabs, and high-current connectors.
THT integration options:
- Manual soldering for prototype or low-volume builds
- Wave soldering for high-volume THT boards
- Selective soldering for mixed SMT and THT assemblies
- Press-fit for backplanes and some high-reliability connectors
THT Production Controls
| THT Control | Practical Range | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Hole clearance | Lead diameter + 0.15-0.30 mm | Supports insertion and solder flow |
| Barrel fill | Often 75% or more by requirement | Improves electrical and mechanical strength |
| Lead protrusion | Typically 0.5-2.5 mm by assembly rule | Prevents shorts and weak joints |
| Selective solder dwell | Often 2-5 seconds by joint mass | Controls wetting |
| Preheat temperature | Process-specific | Reduces thermal shock and improves flux action |
THT should be planned during PCB design. If selective solder keepout, pallet clearance, or connector spacing is ignored, assembly cost rises and manual touch-up increases.
Inspection and Testing
Inspection Sequence
Inspection should occur at multiple points, not only at the end of production.
Inspection methods:
- SPI after solder paste printing
- AOI after placement or reflow
- X-ray for BGA, LGA, QFN, and hidden joints
- Visual inspection under IPC-A-610 class
- First article inspection
- Rework verification
- Conformal coating inspection when required
IPC-A-610 is a post-assembly acceptance standard, while IPC J-STD-001 defines soldered assembly process and material requirements; together, they give assembly teams a shared language for workmanship and acceptance.
Electrical and Functional Testing
| Test Type | What It Finds | Best Use |
|---|---|---|
| Flying probe | Opens, shorts, wrong values | Prototype and low volume |
| ICT | Shorts, opens, resistance, capacitance, diode checks | Medium and high volume |
| Boundary scan | Digital interconnect faults | Dense digital assemblies |
| Functional test | Real product behavior | Final validation |
| Burn-in | Early-life failures | High-reliability electronics |
| Thermal test | Temperature-related failures | Industrial, medical, automotive |
A PCBA can pass ICT but fail functional testing if power sequencing, firmware loading, RF tuning, clock startup, or thermal behavior is not validated.
Assembly Options
Turnkey PCBA
Turnkey PCBA means the supplier handles PCB fabrication, component procurement, assembly, inspection, testing, and often logistics. It reduces supplier coordination work and improves accountability when fabrication and assembly defects interact.
Turnkey PCBA is useful when:
- The engineering team wants one manufacturing owner.
- Component procurement is complex.
- The project needs fast prototype-to-pilot transfer.
- The board has BGA, fine-pitch ICs, or mixed technology.
- Functional testing and rework feedback must return quickly.
Consigned and Partial Turnkey
Consigned assembly means the customer supplies all components and often the bare PCB. Partial turnkey means the customer supplies some critical parts, while the supplier sources the rest.
| Assembly Model | Customer Supplies | Supplier Handles | Best Fit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Turnkey PCBA | Files and approval | PCB, components, assembly, test | Fast engineering and single accountability |
| Consigned assembly | PCB and all components | Assembly and inspection | Customer-controlled inventory |
| Partial turnkey | Critical parts or long-lead parts | Remaining sourcing and assembly | Balanced control and convenience |
| Prototype assembly | Files and small BOM | Small-batch build and review | EVT and design validation |
| Production assembly | Approved package and test plan | Repeatable volume build | Stable product release |
Getting Started
Gerber Files
Gerber files define copper layers, solder mask, silkscreen, paste layer, and board outline. For assembly, the paste layer matters because it controls stencil aperture generation.
Gerber package should include:
- Top and bottom copper
- Inner copper layers
- Solder mask layers
- Paste layers
- Silkscreen layers
- Board outline
- Mechanical details
- Drill drawing
- Fabrication notes
Bill of Materials
The BOM is the purchasing and assembly backbone. A weak BOM creates wrong parts, substitutions, production delay, and test failures.
A useful BOM should include:
- Reference designator
- Quantity
- Manufacturer part number
- Approved alternate parts
- Description
- Package
- Value and tolerance
- Voltage or power rating
- Lifecycle status
- Customer-supplied or supplier-sourced status
- Do-not-populate marks
- Critical component notes
Pick-and-Place Data
Pick-and-place data, also called centroid data, tells the assembly machine where each SMT component goes.
Centroid data should include:
- Reference designator
- X coordinate
- Y coordinate
- Rotation
- Side of board
- Package name
- Polarity note when needed
Rotation mismatch is one of the most common preventable assembly errors. The safest process is to match centroid, assembly drawing, silkscreen, and BOM before first article approval.
Two Key Comparisons
Turnkey vs Consigned PCBA
| Item | Turnkey PCBA | Consigned PCBA |
|---|---|---|
| Component sourcing | Supplier handles sourcing | Customer supplies parts |
| Schedule control | Better when supplier has purchasing strength | Depends on customer kit readiness |
| Accountability | One supplier owns more process steps | Responsibility is split |
| Best use | Prototype-to-pilot and complex builds | Controlled inventory or special parts |
| Main risk | Supplier substitution must be approved | Short kits and handling damage |
| Engineering value | Faster feedback loop | More customer material control |
Prototype vs Production Assembly
| Item | Prototype Assembly | Production Assembly |
|---|---|---|
| Quantity | 1-100 boards common | Hundreds to thousands |
| Main goal | Prove design and process | Repeatable yield and cost control |
| Tooling | Flexible setup | Optimized stencil, fixtures, test jigs |
| Inspection | Higher engineering review | Standardized QC plan |
| Test | Debug-friendly | Cycle-time-controlled |
| Output | Design correction data | Stable manufacturing baseline |
Quality Control Plan
PCBA QC Gates
A strong PCB assembly service uses stage gates instead of one final inspection.
QC gates:
- Incoming PCB and component inspection.
- Solder paste and stencil verification.
- SPI after paste printing.
- First article inspection after placement.
- AOI after reflow.
- X-ray for hidden solder joints.
- THT solder inspection.
- ICT or flying probe.
- Functional test.
- Final visual inspection.
- Packing and traceability check.
Quality Records
Quality records should be kept by lot, board serial number, or panel code when required.
Useful records:
- Paste batch and expiry
- Reflow profile
- AOI defect log
- X-ray images for BGA builds
- ICT data
- Functional test report
- Rework log
- Conformal coating record
- Firmware version
- Final inspection report
Real Factory Case
Project Background
A customer ordered PCB assembly services for a 4G industrial gateway used in a sealed metal enclosure. The design used mixed SMT and THT, one BGA processor, a cellular module, two board-to-board connectors, terminal blocks, LEDs, SIM socket, and a 12 V input power section.
| Item | Project Data |
|---|---|
| Service model | Partial turnkey PCBA |
| Board type | Mixed SMT and THT assembly |
| Layer count | 8 layers |
| Board thickness | 1.6 mm |
| Finish | ENIG |
| Smallest passive | 0201 |
| BGA pitch | 0.5 mm |
| THT parts | Terminal block, shield tabs, relay |
| Test | ICT plus functional test |
| Inspection | SPI, AOI, X-ray, visual inspection |
| Thermal validation | 45-minute run at 60 C |
Issue Found
The first 250-piece pilot run passed basic AOI at a high rate, but functional test found failures after heat exposure.
Failure data:
- 9 units lost cellular communication after 30 minutes.
- 7 units had insufficient solder fill on terminal block pins.
- 5 units showed BGA void concentration above the internal limit.
- 4 units had intermittent reset during 12 V load switching.
- First-pass yield was 90.0%.
Root causes:
- The BOM listed two alternate buck converters with different thermal pad recommendations.
- The stencil aperture under one QFN was copied from the old revision.
- Selective solder dwell time for terminal blocks was too short.
- BGA X-ray sampling was set at 10%, too low for pilot risk.
- The functional test did not originally include load switching.
Corrective Actions
The assembly team changed:
- Locked the approved buck converter MPN for pilot production.
- Reduced QFN thermal pad aperture by 15%.
- Increased terminal block selective solder dwell from 2.6 seconds to 4.0 seconds.
- Raised BGA X-ray inspection from 10% to 100% for the next pilot.
- Added 12 V load switching to functional test.
- Added thermal soak before final pass.
This case shows why PCBA services must connect BOM control, stencil design, selective soldering, X-ray inspection, and functional testing. The process improvement did not require a board redesign. It required assembly data discipline and pilot-level quality gates.
Common Assembly Errors
File Package Errors
- Missing centroid file
- BOM without manufacturer part numbers
- No approved alternates
- Gerber paste layer not reviewed
- Assembly drawing missing polarity
- No test specification
- Missing firmware version
- No IPC class requirement
Process Setup Errors
- Stencil copied from previous revision
- Reflow profile not measured on the actual board
- SPI skipped for fine-pitch assemblies
- Feeder verification not documented
- X-ray sampling too low for BGA pilot
- Selective solder keepout not checked
- ICT fixture designed too late
Production Release Errors
- Prototype settings used unchanged for production
- No AVL lock before pilot
- No serial traceability
- No rework limit
- No moisture-sensitive device control
- No thermal or load test for power products
- No feedback loop from field returns to assembly process
FAQ About PCB Assembly Services
Question: What are PCB assembly services?
Answer: PCB assembly services turn a bare printed circuit board into a functional PCBA by sourcing or receiving components, applying solder paste, placing parts, reflow soldering, integrating through-hole components, inspecting solder joints, testing the assembly, and preparing the finished circuit card assembly for use.
Question: What files are needed to start PCBA?
Answer: A PCBA project needs Gerber files, drill files, BOM, pick-and-place centroid data, assembly drawing, fabrication notes, polarity notes, test specification, firmware file when required, and clear sourcing instructions for turnkey, consigned, or partial turnkey assembly.
Question: What is the difference between turnkey and consigned PCB assembly?
Answer: Turnkey PCB assembly means the supplier manages PCB fabrication, component sourcing, assembly, inspection, and often testing. Consigned assembly means the customer supplies the PCB and components, while the supplier performs assembly and inspection. Partial turnkey splits sourcing between both sides.
Question: How should engineers choose PCB assembly services?
Answer: Engineers should choose PCB assembly services by matching the board to the supplier’s SMT, THT, BGA, X-ray, ICT, functional test, sourcing, traceability, and quality control capability. The right supplier should review files, flag BOM risk, verify process limits, and provide inspection data before production release.