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  • čas přidán 9. 06. 2024
  • What difference does a 4 layer PCB make to EMC radiated emissions compared to an identical 2 layer PCB? And why?
    Dave does H-Field near-field probe testing on two otherwise identical PCB's.
    Electromagnetic waves and the difference between near field and far field, and H-Field and E-field probes and wave impedance is also explained.
    The PCB layout is then examined to look at loop area and by-passing and what effect this has.
    Forum: www.eevblog.com/forum/blog/eev...
    gigatron.io/
    Designing the 4 layer board: • KiCAD PCB Design
    Bypass capacitor Visualised: • EEVblog #1085 - Bypass...
    PCB Power Plan Capacitance: • EEVblog #1117 - PCB Po...
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Komentáře • 463

  • @iamdarkyoshi
    @iamdarkyoshi Před 5 lety +133

    So this is what the metalised plastic on cheap laptops is for, shielding the board from radiating EMI. Neat.

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 5 lety +45

      Yes, but doesn't fully shield the H-Field component unless it's a special mu-metal designed to do that. Nickel screening alone mostly works on the E-field component, but only has about 1/100th the permeability of MuMetal so it's not that great on the H-field.

    • @kapioskapiopoylos7338
      @kapioskapiopoylos7338 Před 5 lety +12

      @@EEVblog could you please do an smd vs th emc?

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 5 lety +13

      kapios kapiopoylos There would be hardly any difference if you kept the layout otherwise identical

    • @robertw1871
      @robertw1871 Před 5 lety +11

      What’s really hard is trying to shield low frequency signals, it was once described to me that trying to stop 50/60 Hz is equivalent to trying to stop a bullet with tinfoil. High frequency of hundreds of MHz or GHz that a modern laptop would produce can be pretty much stopped by nearly anything in its path.

    • @robertw1871
      @robertw1871 Před 5 lety +9

      npgatech it’s not just black magic to some of us, it’s black magic to ALL of us lol... there’s principles you should follow, but a way to engineer this problem out of existence would be impossible, it’s so dependent on each design. I’ve had job interviews where the chief engineer would desperately ask if I had any EMI compliance experience, because they had failed the test so many times and didn’t have a clue what to do about it... if you end up with a product that’s badly misbehaving it can be a real nightmare even for professionals that specialize in this type of work... the problem you will face is not learning the techniques, it’s the massive expense of it; it’s stupidity expensive to test EMI, and without testing you will have no idea where you are. You need really expensive gear just to start asking if your efforts did anything at all...

  • @oly463
    @oly463 Před 5 lety +93

    This is great, the first time I have ever seen someone do this on the same pcb as a 2 layer and 4 layer with groundplane.
    Thanks Dave this is a really really useful emc video.

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 5 lety +19

      Thanks. Can't say I've seen it anywhere else either which is why I was interested in doing it. Perhaps another video with a 6 layer version with ground planes on the outside layers?

    • @charleyfan1908
      @charleyfan1908 Před 5 lety +5

      Or even a four layers with the ground planes on the outside.

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 5 lety +5

      Yeah, doh, layer with ground and power outside. Crosstalk signal integrity on signal layers isn't really an issue here.

    • @Daveyk021
      @Daveyk021 Před 5 lety +2

      EEVblog You video should be used in electronic schools! Why not make the top and bottom layers ground with the traces and power layer internal? Would that make it super shielded?

    • @KuraIthys
      @KuraIthys Před 5 lety

      @@Daveyk021 lol. Maybe it would.
      On the other hand, having had to do amateur fixes to old electronics at times, the thought of having all the critical traces being internal within the board kinda gives me nightmares...
      Multilayer boards in general can be a bit intimidating when you're trying to figure out what the circuit looks like from the PCB traces alone. When large chunks of the traces are effectively invisible...
      Well... Yeah. Good luck. >__

  • @williamvaverka5191
    @williamvaverka5191 Před 5 lety +52

    I am a PCB designer in a small electronics designing company and we are aiming a lot on the low price, so most of thw stuff we do is 2 layer. It caused a lot of problems to us when we go to EMC testing. Biggest problem is the fast switching, you can put 10R to 22R resistor in series in the high speed traces, this helps a lot. Also keep your traces as short as possible and always look for the ground loop.

    • @w6wdh
      @w6wdh Před 5 lety

      Yes, it is an excellent idea to put small resistors in series with the IC outputs that drive high speed traces. This helps control the edge rates, reducing radiated emissions. It also reduces the current spikes as the high speed outputs drive the capacitive loading of the traces, vias, and other IC input pins.

    • @pentachronic
      @pentachronic Před 5 lety +3

      The resistors typically allow you to match the impedance of the trace. This stops current sloshing around hence lowering emissions. Think of a wave in a bath of water. Now put some form of blockage in the path and you will see ripples all over. This is what impedance mismatches are. You are trying to make everything look the same to the wave fronts. A better analogy is your tyre across a dirt road and the suspension. Fill in the holes and you creat a smooth surface, or remove dirt piles and create a smooth surface.

    • @ZeusandHades
      @ZeusandHades Před 29 dny

      ​@@pentachronic How do you simulate this to know what resistor to add?

    • @pentachronic
      @pentachronic Před 28 dny

      @@ZeusandHades You use a Signal Integrity simulator tool. This calculates the impedance of the trace based on the characteristic impedances of the materials of the PCB. Ie using microwave stripline and microstrip modelling. You could do it by hand too (as we did in the old days) using microstrip and stripline formulas (there are books and internet resources - ARRL HAM manual has a lot of info in). Tools such as Altium can do this for you too but for better quality Mentor/Siemens Hyperlynx and Cadence’s Allegro SI package. There’s also Ansoft RF tools too and a few others.

    • @pentachronic
      @pentachronic Před 28 dny

      To be more accurate you use IBIS models Io Bus Interface Standard which also models the Inputs and outputs of various ICs on your board. This allows you to simulate the whole signal chain and the trace and figure out the correct termination scheme. I will add that this can be fairly complext to get right if you are working on SerDes or other very fast signalling technologies. It’s a field in it’s own right.

  • @ELECTRONOOBS
    @ELECTRONOOBS Před 5 lety +92

    This is so nice to see the effects directly and the difference between 2 and 4 layers. I made a lot of PCBs for my DIY projects that are using radio connection. I always had problems with the radio module because the SPI for that was very "sensitive", but once I place that on the exterior of the PCB and made a ground and Vcc plane, the board had no more radio errors. Especially that my board was using PWM signals and MOSFET control and that made a lot more noise. Thank you for all that you show us!

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 5 lety +10

      Yep, can make a huge difference when you have an intentional high-ish power transmitter on your board!

  • @GiGaSzS
    @GiGaSzS Před 5 lety +87

    More EMC videos are welcome :)

  • @MaxWattage
    @MaxWattage Před 5 lety +15

    I'm delighted to see this high-quality educational content.

  • @JonathanDFielding
    @JonathanDFielding Před 5 lety +3

    I'm an electrical engineer and I love these type of videos. I'm still pretty young a very hungry and eager to improve my skills. Work for a large company and so there are other engineers whose careers have been dedicated to Signal integrity. So I don't really get to learn this as they are the ones who are the real experts on these topics. Then again I don't think we've ever done anything smaller than a 6 layer board. We ground flood the top and bottom layers and all signals are inside the board. That's how they deal with Emi and EMC. They just surround everything in ground. Please do more videos on practical engineering tips and tricks. I enjoy these types of teaching the young engineers much more than I like an unboxing video. I do really like your tear-downs to as they can teach a lot

  • @noakeswalker
    @noakeswalker Před 5 lety +4

    Great to see A-B-A comparison of the same layout in 2 and 4 layer. Thanks Dave.

  • @ayitsyaboi
    @ayitsyaboi Před 5 lety +2

    Just dropping in to say how refreshing it is to see a content creator who actually interacts whit their viewers. I barely understand any of what I'm watching, but as a hobbyist going nowhere I still find it all super interesting.

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 5 lety +1

      Thanks, I try to reply to comment as much as possible

  • @michaelmoorrees3585
    @michaelmoorrees3585 Před 5 lety +15

    FCC Part 15 is the compliance regs in the US. In the late 70's these new personal computers (Apple II, CP/M systems, but NO IBM PC, yet) plus video game consoles, and other microprocessor based products needed to be added to the compliance standard. So subpart J was added. The whole Part 15 reg has been since realigned, so there is no subpart J anymore. I'm old enough, and had was in the electronics business when subpart J was added. The company gave me the task of making sure our product designs complied with the new regs. Some of these RFI/EMI testing houses are better than others. The first one we went to just ran the test, and we had to fix it back at the shop, before retesting. Another house, let us try things while at their facility, and ran shortened tests to check our intermediate results. They also gave us suggestions. That was a good test facility !
    Now products come out of China, and testing boils down to applying a compliance sticker.

    • @boggisthecat
      @boggisthecat Před 5 lety +3

      Michael Moorrees
      No, compliance is still required for foreign products.

    • @AndreDeLimburger
      @AndreDeLimburger Před 5 lety +7

      Of course testing is still required, but is it actually performed. The thing is when Chinese products are sold directly to customers on websites like eBay, then the testing might be just a sticker. The importing party is responsible for compliance, and when this importing party is a end-user who doesn't know or care about compliance, then the Chinese manufacturer wouldn't bother performing tests. When I have a company importing Chinese electronics and reselling them, then I must be sure they're complaint.

    • @boggisthecat
      @boggisthecat Před 5 lety

      GromBeestje
      That’s a downside of importing items. If it has a compliance label then it also has an associated number that you can check. Some stuff I have seen has no compliance at all, or only domestic compliance (which may be tighter in some cases - particularly when you have Trump toadies in charge of compliance).
      Retailers are always liable for what they sell, and certainly here items are anonymously bought by compliance authorities and sent to labs for verification. If they don’t comply then the retailer must recall the item(s). I’ve seen it happen with appliances a couple of times, and often with infant and children’s clothing and the like. Regulation is a necessary part of a functional society.

    • @KuraIthys
      @KuraIthys Před 5 lety +1

      heh. I have a lot of old game consoles and computers around, and it's interesting seeing the progression in the shielding.
      Also the history of some designs.
      Like the 800XL vs it's predecessor from 4 years earlier.
      Mostly the same internal components, but the shielding...
      The early 80's variant has some pretty hefty metal shielding inside the plastic outer case...
      But the late 70's variant is basically all metal construction with an additional, very thick inner layer of metal just for shielding purposes.
      Because at the time it HAD to be to have any hope of meeting compliance standards, yet a few years later near enough the same internal hardware could get away with comparatively flimsy and insubstantial shielding.
      (still extremely heavy shielding compared to more modern devices though.)

    • @boggisthecat
      @boggisthecat Před 5 lety +1

      KuraIthys
      It’s more a case of not knowing how to meet the standards, so ensuring compliance by excessive shielding. By the early 1980s it was easier to include EMC compliance testing in the R&D process.

  • @ElmerFuddGun
    @ElmerFuddGun Před 5 lety +8

    Ah yes, the Gigatron Computer is back. Almost forgot about your 4 layer version. Watching with interest!

  • @kardeef33317
    @kardeef33317 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you again Dave for sharing your knowledge and wisdom, I am finally able to wrap my head around this.

  • @qwerty13380
    @qwerty13380 Před 2 lety +1

    Good work Dave, amazing video. I have never seen a 2 to 4 layer PCB comparison before, and to have a board for the test with this level of complexity is really a bonus.

  • @dotdissonance
    @dotdissonance Před 5 lety +1

    This was super helpful! Thank you. Short loops, via stitching and watch out for bypass caps. Perfect timing for a current project as well. Still killin' it after all these years!

  • @drjmansplace5174
    @drjmansplace5174 Před 5 lety +1

    Sometimes, as professionals, we overlook some basics. Thanks for the post. Great refresher.

  • @Graham_Wideman
    @Graham_Wideman Před 5 lety +4

    Great credit to Dave for going to the effort of making this board and exhibiting the measurements! Some of Dave's videos can be relatively blab or rant oriented, of which there is much on CZcams :-), but videos like the current one really distinguish this channel. Well done Dave!

  • @metallitech
    @metallitech Před 5 lety +1

    This is just the sort of thing that I have been meaning to learn. Thanks Dave!

  • @MunishKumar-gw6kw
    @MunishKumar-gw6kw Před 5 lety +1

    Excellent insight into the practical aspects of EMI world! Thanks for doing this video 😃

  • @marv4895
    @marv4895 Před 3 lety

    one of the best videos I found during my search for this topic

  • @namty3319
    @namty3319 Před 5 lety +1

    Great job Dave. I love your video not only the technical aspect, but the way you spit out your knowledge with so much emphasis. Keep doing more and more video.

  • @Damien.D
    @Damien.D Před 5 lety +20

    DaveCAD, now in 3D and augmented reality.

  • @ekarter1981
    @ekarter1981 Před 5 lety

    Brilliantly thought EMC video. Big thumbs up for Dave!

  • @keithlambell1970
    @keithlambell1970 Před 5 lety

    A great experiment to directly show the difference a full ground and power plane can make. Thanks for a really informative video.

  • @Siktah
    @Siktah Před 5 lety +1

    great to see you making uses of those probes :)

  • @b4fball
    @b4fball Před 5 lety

    This is awesome. Thanks, Dave! Much new information learned.

  • @amaldev000
    @amaldev000 Před 5 lety

    Great video Dave. More videos please on EMC pre-compliance testing and isolating the issues with probes.

  • @anonimuso
    @anonimuso Před 5 lety

    I have never designed a PCB but I am an engineering student and will soon start. This was very informative, as always with your videos.

  • @luisdelgado5710
    @luisdelgado5710 Před 5 lety +2

    Would be great to have more videos about EMI and EMC, more projects, techniques, measures and recommendations. Thanks for the effort!

  • @minhphamngoc531
    @minhphamngoc531 Před 3 lety

    Thank you for sharing this, it helped me to understand better than difference between 2 layer and 4 layer, EMI's source in PCB.

  • @rikvdmark
    @rikvdmark Před 5 lety

    I learned something yet again. Thanks Dave :)

  • @marijntopgear
    @marijntopgear Před 3 lety

    Learned very much from this video. Thanks Dave!

  • @R3TR0R4V3
    @R3TR0R4V3 Před 5 lety

    Very interesting stuff here, Dave! Thanks for the video. 👍

  • @doragasu
    @doragasu Před 5 lety +1

    Ground planes are a must for high frequency digital designs, but I was not expecting such a big difference for these low frequency boards. Pretty instructive, thanks for the video!

  • @jeetlodaya775
    @jeetlodaya775 Před 5 lety

    This was a really good video hope to see more pcb design videos in the future.

  • @PlasmaHH
    @PlasmaHH Před 5 lety +2

    Regarding the heatmat, a rather different ("real") kind of heatmap I have seen many years ago in a video (that I can't find):
    The guy took some thin layer pcb ground planes (full, with split etc.), painted them black and took some prepreg with signal traces, overlayed them and then ran high power high frequency signals through them. In the end he took an image with a thermal camera. The result was very neatly showing how the low frequency components chose the intuitive shortest path, but the high frequency ones were following the signals, or spreading out in places nobody would have thought of.

  • @bossssie1
    @bossssie1 Před 5 lety +8

    It used to be a challenge to route everything on a 2 layer board. Since I've had a couple of products compliance tested I go straight to the 4 layers.

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 5 lety +5

      Yeah, not much cost difference these days.

  • @deadroo
    @deadroo Před 5 lety

    Great information Dave, Thank You.

  • @DansKoiPond
    @DansKoiPond Před 5 lety

    Love this sort of video. Classic Dave.

  • @ewafelber1658
    @ewafelber1658 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I love your explanation about near and far field extra to the main subject. When it comes to layers, I newly redesigned an RF board (up to 6 GHz) from 4 to 6 layers. A lot of other changes had to be made, mostly because of the last problems with delivery of the components and because of the heat issue. But I have taken care of the appropriate routing of the RF lines and of grounding in general, in the same time REMOVING many decoupling capacitors (after watching Eric Bogatin presentation at Altium Live) and... the PLL on the board is soooo less noisy!! The biggest Spourious reduced from ca. 30 dBc to less than 50. Sadly I could not compare the grounding alone so nicely as you did

  • @TheVirindi
    @TheVirindi Před 5 lety +64

    Uh oh! One board has plastic feet on it, and the other doesn't? Slightly different measurement distance! :D

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 5 lety +50

      Well spotted! I can confirm it only makes a slight difference, about 1-2dB tops.

    • @TheVirindi
      @TheVirindi Před 5 lety +16

      @@EEVblog Thanks for checking! :)

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 5 lety +23

      And BTW, it doesn't change the characteristic response shape, just the average amplitude by a small amount.

    • @johnfrancisdoe1563
      @johnfrancisdoe1563 Před 5 lety +1

      EEVblog But throughout the video. Both had same general shape, at some distance (you kept mentioning 15dB).

    • @jaguarpaw1638
      @jaguarpaw1638 Před 5 lety +2

      @@EEVblog thats what they all say ;)

  • @RobertFeranec
    @RobertFeranec Před 5 lety +23

    @Dave, please take it to an official EMC lab to compare the boards (if a lab would measure it for you for free)

    • @MaxWattage
      @MaxWattage Před 5 lety

      Do you have any opinion regarding the pros and cons of having 4-layer boards with the power-planes as the outer layers and the signal tracks on the inner layers, versus having the signal tracks on the outer layers and the power-planes on the inner layers?

    • @EveryThingTechet
      @EveryThingTechet Před 5 lety +9

      @@MaxWattage
      1. Propagation delay is higher for internal layers.
      2. You'll need a ton of vias, that would break up the ground/power planes and that wouldn't be great for return paths. Also reducing vias on high speed signals is desirable.
      3. It would be difficult to rework the board if needed.

    • @mrgibbo63me46
      @mrgibbo63me46 Před 5 lety

      @@EveryThingTechet Points 1 and 3 you are correct. Point 2 is completely wrong. It wouldn't make any difference to the number of vias. You could simply swap the layers but still use the same artwork. You could actually REDUCE the numbers of vias by using blind/buried vias which you can't do with the signal layers on the top and bottom.

    • @TheRealMonnie
      @TheRealMonnie Před 3 lety

      @@mrgibbo63me46 nah it really would increase via count. Depending on the board, you could add a ton of vias. Some signal traces wouldn't normally go into the middle or bottom layers, but to make a ground plane on the outside you'd have to add 2 vias per trace.

    • @robertbox5399
      @robertbox5399 Před 3 lety

      @@TheRealMonnie Definitely true for an SMD design. Through hole like in this video - the layer orders would not affect via count. You want the power/GND layers to be close together though - increases capacitance between them. There is something to be said for having further GND on additional outer layers and the Faraday shield effect. High speed data is often sandwiched between 2 GND layers to maintain transmission line impedance.

  • @MattHollands
    @MattHollands Před 5 lety

    Make more stuff like this! There is so much stuff we are told about PCB layout best practices that we take for granted but an engineer doesn't have time to make all these mistakes for themselves.

  • @erikmjelde4428
    @erikmjelde4428 Před 2 lety

    Great video and demo! Thanks

  • @jimvonmoon
    @jimvonmoon Před 5 lety

    Cool video, I didn't know how those multi-layer PCBs were laid out. Very interesting.

  • @pkplexing
    @pkplexing Před 5 lety

    This is a cool and interesting comparison, thanks

  • @testep02
    @testep02 Před 5 lety +41

    Awesome video! Seeing a side-by-side with identical boards with different layers is something that many of us have never seen done. Quick question: What would the difference be if you reversed the layers and did the traces internally and the ground and 5V externally? Thanks so much for your efforts, Dave!

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 5 lety +18

      That would be an interesting experiment.

    • @wolvenar
      @wolvenar Před 5 lety +2

      I guess I just asked this question myself. Would be very interesting

    • @testep02
      @testep02 Před 5 lety +7

      @@EEVblog I would love to see that. Also, what effect does placing a ground "ring" around the outer perimeter of the board that attaches to the device connector shields and then attaches to the board ground plane through capacitors? I know that technique is for ESD protection, but does it help to reduce EMI at all? If you want to see an example of what I'm referring to, you can look at the BeagleBone PCB files. They have that "ground" perimeter on every single layer of the board, not just the outer layers that connect to connector shields. Does that have to do with the high-speed DDR or HDMI signals that are on the board?

    • @saddle1940
      @saddle1940 Před 5 lety +1

      Oopps, just asked the same thing.

    • @vitmatteo
      @vitmatteo Před 5 lety +2

      With a board with 100% through hole components, not much difference except for the better shielding of the signals that now are inside a shielded box (planes on the outer layers). In a board with SMT components it makes a big difference, since having ground/power internal layers means they are almost a complete plane with no voids, while if they are on the outer layers, you have all the pads of the SMT components creating voids and discontinuities in the planes which reduce the effectiveness of the planes. But if you are really concerned with emissions and you have money to spare for a couple of extra layers, you can fill top/bottom layers with ground (only if there is another solid ground internal plane) plus ground ring on the edge of every other layer and use lots of vias on the edges of the PCB to make the PCB like a shielded box for all the signals in the internal layers. Mentor Graphics wrote a book about how using top/bottom layers as ground helps to reduce the number of layers (on board with 16+ layers) since it means bypass caps don't need a via to ground (otherwise every bypass cap has a via to power and one to ground). Also the pair power/ground planes creates a capacitor which is part of the power distribution network to the high speed chips. Changing the position of the power/ground planes in the PCB stackup will change the capacitance and the inductance. FPGA (or other highs speed ICs) companies have lots on apps notes on this topic.

  • @radoslawbiernacki
    @radoslawbiernacki Před 5 lety

    That was great! Good piece of knowledge!
    And lol, just how precisely the ad profiling works. Right after your video I've got AD isoPower advert xD

  • @Mohammad-vx9by
    @Mohammad-vx9by Před 4 lety

    Awesome and quite informative. Thank you.

  • @TheDefpom
    @TheDefpom Před 5 lety

    Nice, I learnt something today... that’s always a good thing.

  • @ThatEgghead
    @ThatEgghead Před 5 lety +1

    Yes please on more EMC / EMI videos, especially radiated.
    Basically what you can and can't get away with in a design and pass compliance testing. And what you can and can't derive from a semi-affordable pre-compliance testing setup.
    Examples of topics I'd love - I'd especially love to see comparisons between lab measurements, DIY antennas and middle road spectrum analyzers like your Siglent and Rigol, DIY OATS , the probes as you did in this video, semi-anechoic chambers, and *especially* with TEM cells since they're supposedly usable in lieu of a proper OATS.
    How to properly setup and run the equipment to test against compliance standards for intentional and unintentional radiators.

  • @BarriosGroupie
    @BarriosGroupie Před 5 lety

    This needs to go viral

  • @AllSySt3msG0
    @AllSySt3msG0 Před 5 lety

    Thanks for the explanation, this video was really useful.

  • @lancebantoto
    @lancebantoto Před 5 lety

    Thanks Dave! Awesome video

  • @GGoffroad2
    @GGoffroad2 Před 5 lety

    I absolutely would love an emi emc video follow up! I have some testing to do next month

  • @jamesmauer7398
    @jamesmauer7398 Před 5 lety +17

    If you decide you want to make a heat map of the emissions, using the Python imaging library (PIL/Pillow) combined with an XY table (to line scan the board) and a way to get the data into a computer would be really neat!

    • @fransdebruijn6763
      @fransdebruijn6763 Před 5 lety +6

      Matplotlib may also work quite well for the application. its easy to use. there is a library called seaborn which is even better for the task.

  • @foxabilo
    @foxabilo Před 5 lety +16

    I'd be very interested in the heat map generation idea Dave, give that one a ++

    • @redsquirrelftw
      @redsquirrelftw Před 5 lety +3

      I was thinking about that before he mentioned it, definitely would be neat to setup a rig for that. Kinda like a CNC machine and you put the board in and it just slowly tests each spot. The same rig could perhaps also be used for taking very high res photos of PCBs. Imagine doing something kind of like google maps but with PCBs.

    • @foxabilo
      @foxabilo Před 5 lety +3

      Yes, I was thinking a printable detector for a 3d printer, Dave did say he was going to show how to "roll your own detector" now we could print a clip on case that attaches to a 3d printer head like my creality ender 3 and boom a few hours work and you have a very high spec 3d EMI scanner! the ability to create 3d plots would be of immense use for problematic layouts and great ones too, the ability to log the EMI values in 3d space will lead to all sorts of clever solutions... just a brilliant idea.

    • @foxabilo
      @foxabilo Před 5 lety +1

      It also raises some interesting points too, like getting the DUT to behave in stable consistent way over time, as the scan progresses you don't want the test device changing power levels or turning on and off antennas etc.

  • @mikedrz
    @mikedrz Před 5 lety +1

    What a coincidence, I was just watching the older video of Dave working on this board in KiCad. Just as I finished, got a notification for this one... sweet.

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 5 lety +1

      Spooky

    • @mikedrz
      @mikedrz Před 5 lety

      @@EEVblog Spooky, but convenient. I think you planned it that way all along... haha

  • @mahdimahdavi
    @mahdimahdavi Před 5 lety

    Very nice. thanks Dave.

  • @Samurai38135
    @Samurai38135 Před 5 lety

    Excellent video.

  • @PierreAlexandrePapillon
    @PierreAlexandrePapillon Před 5 lety +2

    Thank you very much Dave. Very interesting video! Could you do more EMC video?

  • @MedSou
    @MedSou Před 5 lety

    *Very informative ,Thank you* 👍👍👍👍

  • @harvham7399
    @harvham7399 Před 5 lety

    Great video, more please!

  • @bobvincent5921
    @bobvincent5921 Před 5 lety

    Enjoyed this and is nice to revise my Real memory.

  • @QoraxAudio
    @QoraxAudio Před 5 lety +1

    Identical PCB, except for the audio out socket?
    I expected to be a difference of -3db to -6db.
    This difference you've shown is incredible!

  • @viggstable305
    @viggstable305 Před 5 lety +1

    I LOVE when you do EMC Videos.... My companies units need to be compliant to EN12895 for our systems. I found using a Walkie Talkie is an excellent way to perform some precompliance Radiated Immunity Testing. You should try it out Dave.

  • @PaulSteMarie
    @PaulSteMarie Před 5 lety +4

    Interesting. FWIW, a coil like that measures the magnetic flux though the coil, so when the coil is flat you're measuring the vertical component of the H field.

  • @SeanBZA
    @SeanBZA Před 5 lety

    Exactly the same as on that silent terminal, where you had the massive copper bodge wires to make loop area small on the plug in daughter boards, as the original ones had a long snaking ground path around the perimeter of the board.

  • @nielshjruppedersen5932

    Great video!

  • @Herby-1620
    @Herby-1620 Před 5 lety +2

    An interesting measurement would be to take a bare (unstuffed) board and measure the capacitance between Vcc and Gnd to find out how much filtering it would be.

  • @thebigbrennanski
    @thebigbrennanski Před 5 lety

    Wow! 15 dB difference!? Never would have guessed it. Great experiment.

  • @Engineer_Valat
    @Engineer_Valat Před 5 lety

    Thank you somuch Dave. Very cool video! Could you do a video about EMC PCB design rules?

  • @deBug67
    @deBug67 Před 5 lety

    Great Video Dave!
    What a fantastic job, doing a complete layout and board to being able to do the comparison!
    I don't agree with you though that it is a "huge difference" with 10 to 15dB. But then again I'm an RF guy that often work with ranges of 100dB or more in signal dynamics. Again, great work!!

  • @Basement-Science
    @Basement-Science Před 5 lety +5

    What about different sizes (diameters) of vias? Or is it better to use more vias instead?
    Both should decrease the impedance.

  • @ElmerFuddGun
    @ElmerFuddGun Před 5 lety +6

    You missed the *3rd* orientation by having the probe vertical (looking at the video). It might help to determine if a problem is with horizontal left right traces versus vertical up down traces.

  • @vmiguel1988
    @vmiguel1988 Před 5 lety

    Yes Dave more videos about this subject!

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 5 lety

      ok!

    • @vmiguel1988
      @vmiguel1988 Před 5 lety

      @@EEVblog you could go deeper in different kinds of electronics certifications too, for example for consumer, industrial and military rating designs.

  • @zmast333
    @zmast333 Před 5 lety +5

    Great video. A couple of questions:
    1) On a 4-layer PCB, is there any significant difference between a SIGNAL-PLANE-PLANE-SIGNAL and a PLANE-SIGNAL-SIGNAL-PLANE arrangement?
    2) Are GND+GND and GND+VCC planes equivalent?
    My guess is that:
    1) PLANE-SIGNAL-SIGNAL-PLANE would be slightly better for radiated EMI because it traps the noise inside the PCB, but that also means it will slightly degrade the signals.
    2) Shielding would be equivalent but GND+VCC planes would be better than GND+GND as it lowers the impedance on VCC nets, also the GND+VCC planes would form a wide bypass cap which might help at very high frequencies.
    Any thoughts?
    edit: Just realized several people came up with the same questions :)

  • @SureshKumar-nk2ok
    @SureshKumar-nk2ok Před 4 lety

    thank u very much sir ,ur videos are very professional helping me

  • @SQ5DBF
    @SQ5DBF Před 5 měsíci

    Very useful video.

  • @TheMohsell
    @TheMohsell Před 5 lety +1

    Hi Dave, many thanks for the valuable contents. I was wondering if you have / intend to do a tutorial on how to route mixed signal boards, how to separate analog and digital Vccs, GNDs planes. Thank you

  • @JackZimmermann
    @JackZimmermann Před 5 lety +12

    Great stuff! I've tried to find information on the internet, but there's so much conflicting information on doing good PCB layout. Videos like this really help. More, please!
    How about splitting up four layer board ground for isolating sensitive areas? Can't find any reliable info on how to do it. Some recommend star ground, but I never manage to figure out where to put the center node for best effect. Anyway, thanks again.

    • @fransdebruijn6763
      @fransdebruijn6763 Před 5 lety +4

      look through the texas instruments and analog devices data sheets for their high perormance ADCs and DACs.

    • @johnfrancisdoe1563
      @johnfrancisdoe1563 Před 5 lety

      Frans de Bruijn Looking in random data sheets for this is going to be hit or miss, as different writers and skill levels will be used from one datasheet to the next.

    • @fransdebruijn6763
      @fransdebruijn6763 Před 5 lety

      @@johnfrancisdoe1563 The datasheets often show the component layout with ground isolation for components that have both digital and analog components. T.I. has the board layouts for their evaluation boards available for download, thats a good start to see how they do things. There is also some software called AppCad that you can use for calculating the impedance of tracks if you want to design controlled impedance boards. this is especially important when you are working above 20mhz clock speeds.

    • @saginata
      @saginata Před 5 lety

      The information is conflicting because people try to compress a complicated subject into simple rules of thumb and this rarely works in EMC. As for splitting ground planes, I'd try to avoid it. It can have benefits, but the risks are much bigger and it's full of traps. 9 of 10 times a single uninterrupted ground plane will be best. As for information online, check out Henry Ott's website and the book EMC for product designers.

  • @avejst
    @avejst Před 5 lety

    Interesting subject
    Thanks for sharing👍😀

  • @scoobyrex247
    @scoobyrex247 Před 5 lety

    Great video. Recently purchased a four layer pcb class D amp by Sony.

  • @zman97211
    @zman97211 Před 5 lety +1

    Probe + some servos -> planar near-field scan -> near-field back-projection. The "near-field back-projection" would be interesting.

  • @RS-ls7mm
    @RS-ls7mm Před 5 lety

    In really fast edge rate electronics we used to run traces between two ground layers (gnd/trace/trace/gnd) just to control the trace impedance better. I was fortunate in that I rarely had to worry about EMI because the enclosure was fully shielded. Used to run vias around the perimeter to control the emissions sometimes.

  • @e74av
    @e74av Před 5 lety

    WOOOUUU this deserves big like!

  • @johnsim3722
    @johnsim3722 Před 5 lety

    One of the main parts of my Ph.D. was looking at the comparison of EFT performance between two and four layer PCBs and how they affected micro controllers. Took physical boards, tested them, and then was able to simulate their characteristics. "An investigation of the EMC properties of modern microcontrollers", thesis available in the British Library!
    If you have to use two layer boards best to have ground on both sides, and flood as much as possible between signal lines. Lots of vias to stitch those layers together. Think low impedance! Think of making any ground path as short as possible around tracks, around ICs and their decoupling. Don't be afraid to use capacitors, and even bulk capacitors further in to the board as a well of power! Don't just think of having the power supply at one side feeding everything but by using those bulk capacitors to have localised reserves. So if your power line has gone deep in to the board don't be afraid to add another electrolytic to reduce the impedance of the supply at the far reaches.

  • @milesstevens2693
    @milesstevens2693 Před 5 lety

    This is fantastic

  • @electronic7979
    @electronic7979 Před 5 lety

    Super video 👍

  • @ugetridofit
    @ugetridofit Před 5 lety

    This was a great test. Though I would have liked to see yet another PCB with the gnd & power planes on the outside layers and the signal paths in the 2 inside layers.

  • @peterstalin7463
    @peterstalin7463 Před 5 lety +3

    Would it make a difference if the signal layers were sandwiched in between the supply and ground planes? Wouldn’t they act as outer shielding? Just guessing, sorry for my ignorance

  • @EdwinNoorlander
    @EdwinNoorlander Před 5 lety

    Nice, Dave doing KiCad.

  • @michelfeinstein
    @michelfeinstein Před 5 lety +1

    If the shorter path has lots of vias the current distribution might not be that obvious, as it favors the path of least impedance, whereas vias can have high impedance for higher frequencies

  • @GGoffroad2
    @GGoffroad2 Před 5 lety

    Super helpful video! Why aren't you using altium anymore?

  • @catherinetrudel3085
    @catherinetrudel3085 Před 5 lety +3

    Haaaaa the joys of EMI compliance. Love the Tekbox probes I have the same kit with a Siglent SA3021X spectrum analyser, awesome for the price. I also built clamp on RF probes with ferites (Wurth electronics makes great ones) works great to measure radiated emissions from cables and see the difference cable impedance can do. Today there's no reason to not do EMI pre compliance testing in house, it saves a bunch of money and time.

  • @steverobbins4872
    @steverobbins4872 Před 5 lety +14

    Loop area is critical. But there can also be resonances, which can actually amplify harmonic noise. So, solid ground and power planes and a good assortment of decoupling caps is the way to go. FYI, I recommend you take a look at K-SIM at Kemet.com. It's a handy free tool for choosing your bypass caps. Shows a nice Bode plot.

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 5 lety +2

      Absolutely, I mentioned that in my bypass capacitor videos.

    • @robertw1871
      @robertw1871 Před 5 lety

      What’s a real pain these days is getting power consumption low while not having ridiculously fast rise times on the board, thankfully most hyper fast signals can be held within the small confines of the ICs themselves or we’d be in real trouble. Impedance matched low voltage tracks with pre emphasis becomes hard to avoid.

    • @JackZimmermann
      @JackZimmermann Před 5 lety +1

      Great tool! Thanks!

  • @user-ne8bj7ip8x
    @user-ne8bj7ip8x Před 5 lety

    Excellent!

  • @kateandersen8513
    @kateandersen8513 Před 5 lety

    One of the earliest things I was taught for circuit board layout, mid 70s, was to first layout the vertical ground and power traces in parallel right next to each other and going right underneath the chips. This was to keep the length of the ground loop for the chip and bypass capacitors as short as possible. Next, on the other side of the PCB you placed your horizontal power and ground traces at the end of each chip. If you had a long package, you could disrupt them but it was preferred not to. Those were tied with vias to the vertical ground and power traces every place they crossed. Thesy always ran from board edge to board edge. Next you laid out your highest speed switching traces first so that they were the shortest length possible. You're pre-planning when you chosing chip locations on the board was to get the chips involved with these highest speed traces as close as possible to each other.

  • @Audio_Simon
    @Audio_Simon Před 5 lety +3

    Dave! That clip of an anechoic chamber looks exactly like an acoustic anechoic chamber with the sound absorbing wedges. Why would that be needed for radio frequency measurements, or are they different material???

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 5 lety +2

      It's a frequency range thing.

  • @RemcoStoutjesdijk
    @RemcoStoutjesdijk Před 5 lety

    That heatmap idea is brilliant. I am sitting here looking at my 3D printer thinking "yep, that is definitely doable" :)

  • @johndowdell8881
    @johndowdell8881 Před 3 lety

    Back in the 80s I had a TRS-80 model I, which did not have true audio output. There was a program that got around this limitation by intentionally generating EMI that could be picked up by a radio placed near the computer.