The current impression in the PCB industry is that flying probe testers (or probers) are good for low volume production. The test speed was the limiting factor for a wider use of probers.
The advantages of probers as compared to universal testers are well known. There are no limits on the following areas:
¡¤Number of test points
¡¤Density of test points
¡¤Pitch of test points
¡¤Shrinkage of board
¡¤Offset or Shift of board
¡¤Stock of fixtures
¡¤Retest of boards
¡¤Buried Resistance measurements
¡¤Buried Capacitance measurements
The wish of many bare board manufacturers is to use probers not only for small batches ¨C they want to use probers for mass production quantities. Existing universal testers do have a throughput in between 150 to 600 boards/hour. The limitations are pitch, density and size of the boards. The "real" throughput, which means after retest, in many cases will be much lower. A figure of 100 boards/hour is not abnormal. Probers do not have the above problem ¨C whatever test results are reported, the user can highly rely on them. No retest is necessary! Now, how can a prober compete with a universal tester? The answer is "Speed". Or even more simplified: How much does it cost to test a board?
Today in a medium complicate fixture (about 8,000 test points, average 20 mil pitch) for an universal tester costs about € 800.00 in Asia. For an dedicated fixture with 20 mil pitch, you may assume easily € 2.50 per test pins on average ¨C which means € 20,000 ! If 100 boards has to be tested just the fixture cost per board will be about € 8.00 (for universal tester). Now the cost for labour, test machine, re-test, ¡, etc. has to be added. So the test cost per board for a lot of 100 pieces will be about € 9.00 .
Let us assume that a prober can test at 100 test points /sec. That means for a 5,000 test point product, it needs 50 sec. To make the calculation simple lets assume that the total test time will be 1 minute. That means this prober can test 60 boards / hour. If the overall cost for a prober is € 20 /hour, the cost to test one board will be about € 0.40 .(totally independent of quantity , complexity, size and shrinkage.)
So one may conclude the above calculations in the following statement: Any lot-number which is less than a few thousand pieces the cost savings of the super-fast prober comparing to any other method or tester is significant.