Issue link: https://iconnect007.uberflip.com/i/1313710
32 SMT007 MAGAZINE I DECEMBER 2020 ity to make final referee calls. There is also the Master IPC Trainer (MIT), which is the top of the training food chain. They are the ones who certify the trainers that train the specialist. J-STD-001 and IPC-A-610 courses do not encompass every aspect of building or inspect- ing electronic assemblies, but they cover most topics. If need be, you can certify inspectors to look at bare boards, wire harnesses, rework and repair, and/or design, among others. No matter the size of the CM, it is imperative to have properly trained operators on the floor doing the work and inspecting it to make sure it meets whatever acceptance criteria are called out on the drawing. Just as important as having training done to some standard like the IPC is having the operators trained to look at your specific assembly and knowing where to start look- ing when something is out of control. This goes back to another column I wrote some time ago talking about tribal knowledge. In lieu of a copy/paste situation, the CliffsNotes version is the industry is constantly losing more experienced employees who have been part of the build since its inception. With age comes experience, and often, that expe- rience includes time on the equipment used to build your product. You can't teach experi- ence, but you sure can write it down for oth- ers to learn from. Assembly process equipment is often like driving a 1974 Buick Regal (which is not a ran- dom choice, by the way; that was my first car). By that, I mean it would make certain noises that I only learned the root cause of after driv- ing it for many months ( in the off chance I heard it between Mötley Crüe songs). I knew that one certain sound meant I was low on oil. Another sound meant my tire with the con- stant slow leak needed a few pounds of air. In the same way, an experienced operator knows that when they see a bad solder joint or some other anomaly, they need to look at reflow profile, belt speed, or some other param- eter. That is the type of thing that IPC (or any other industry body) cannot teach. That is the definition of tribal knowledge, and it's being lost all the time. My point is that beyond the structured train- ing sessions, there needs to be internal "les- sons learned" training specific to your facil- ity and equipment. Many times, this type of knowledge can play as big of a role in your product's reliability—that, and a 1974 Buick Regal that, while reliable, requires a lot of attention to stay that way. Just like an assem- bly line! Whew, that was certainly a drive to connect those dots. Staffing is the second part of this month's topic, and having never been in the position to directly hire anyone, what I have to offer should be taken with a grain of salt. What I can say from personal experience is you don't need to hire anyone who automatically has every skill you are looking for. I was a drywall finisher for five years before being hired at Foresite. I started as a bench tech in the chemistry lab in a time before autosamplers, which afforded a lot of time for reading up on both the electron- ics assembly process and at the root cause of the failures we were testing. Even back in the early 2000s, we had a few pretty good microscopes to go along with some experienced engineers who would take time from their busy schedules to teach me a thing or two here and there when time allowed. Sure, I had the luxury of time that others might not have, but the point is to hire people with a desire to learn more about what they are doing and why, beyond just being their job. There are no bad car puns or musical memories from the 1980s here—just a recommendation to hire people who are naturally inquisitive whenever possible. Your assembly floor managers and line oper- ators are the first and last line that steer your reliability numbers. (I knew I could get one more in there.) SMT007 Eric Camden is a lead investigator at Foresite Inc. To read past columns or contact Camden, click here.