PCB assembly spans hand through-hole work, light-guided operator systems (pick-to-light), and automated processes dominated by SMT pick-and-place and reflow. Through-hole insertion and wave or selective soldering remain in use for specific needs. Choose the method that matches your volume, cost, and complexity requirements.
What PCB assembly involves
PCB assembly covers the methods used to place and solder electronic components onto printed circuit boards. Small manufacturers typically use a mix of techniques - from hand assembly for prototypes to automated surface-mount lines for volume production. This guide explains common approaches you'll encounter in a modern shop.
Through-hole (hand) assembly
Through-hole hand assembly remains the go-to for one-offs and low-volume prototypes. Operators "preform" components by bending leads so each part fits its board footprint. Grouping like parts (all resistors, diodes, etc.) speeds work.
If you plan to hand-solder, you can solder as you place parts or "cut-and-clinch" (trim and fold leads) and solder later. For small runs, this is often simplest and lowest-cost.
Wave solder machines once dominated through-hole production. They're still used for medium-to-high volume through-hole or mixed-technology boards, but many shops now prefer selective soldering for boards with both through-hole and surface-mount parts.
Light-guided and assisted manual assembly
Modern equivalents to the old "light-guided" approach are called pick-to-light or light-guided assembly systems. A light indicates the next component location while the operator retrieves the correct part from organized bins. These systems reduce errors and increase throughput for medium-volume runs without full automation.
Today many of these stations include barcode scanners, simple pick-to-light racks, and camera-assisted verification so operators can confirm part orientation and value before placement.
Robotic insertion and surface-mount automation
For higher volumes, automated equipment dominates. Surface-mount technology (SMT) lines use high-speed pick-and-place machines to position components, then a reflow oven to solder them. Pick-and-place accuracy and speed have improved substantially, making SMT the default for most mass-produced electronics.
Automated through-hole insertion still exists for axial and large components. Dedicated insertion machines feed and insert parts; historically, axial inserters such as the ROBIN-style machines automated this task. After insertion, boards may go to selective soldering or a wave solder process depending on design.
Robotic systems now integrate machine vision, automated inspection (AOI), and in-line testing to reduce defects. Mixed-technology boards commonly follow an SMT reflow step, then through-hole insertion and selective soldering for final assembly.
Which method to choose?
- Use hand assembly for prototypes, rework, and very low volumes.
- Use pick-to-light or light-guided stations for small batches that need higher accuracy and speed than hand work.
- Use automated SMT and pick-and-place when volume and unit-cost demands justify the equipment or contract manufacturing.
FAQs about Pcb Assembly
What is the difference between hand assembly and pick-to-light?
When should I use SMT pick-and-place vs. through-hole insertion?
Is wave soldering still used?
Can small shops mix methods on one board?
News about Pcb Assembly
Multi Layer PCB-PCBA Assembly Manufacturer in China/Cambodia With ENIG/OSP/HASL Surface Finish - Global Sources [Visit Site | Read More]
ISO-Certified PCB Manufacturing and Assembly Strengthen Reliability in Modern Electronics - Louisiana First News [Visit Site | Read More]
OMRON surface-mount sockets to simplify PCB relay assembly - New Electronics [Visit Site | Read More]
PCBAIR Unveils 8-Layer Glass Core PCB Manufacturing for Next-Gen AI & HPC - PR Newswire [Visit Site | Read More]
Why Low-Volume PCB Assembly Is Reshaping Prototype Development - Insights from FR4PCB.TECH - openPR.com [Visit Site | Read More]
New Service: China's Quick 1–10pcs Prototype PCB Assembly Solution by FR4PCB.TECH - The National Law Review [Visit Site | Read More]
Polymatech Electronics Limited Announces Completion of PCB Manufacturing Facility in Europe - PR Newswire UK [Visit Site | Read More]
Is It Time to Bring PCB Assembly (PCBA) In-House? - EEJournal [Visit Site | Read More]