6.1 IPC/J-STD Quick Reference
A one-stop table of the most-used acceptance and process criteria by topic.
Standards are the shortcut to agreement when opinions collide on the floor. This appendix pulls the essentials from IPC (industry acceptability guides) and J-STD (joint standards for soldering and process) into one quick map you can actually use. Think of it as a pointer board: which book answers this question, what Class (1/2/3) applies, and which clause to cite so a debate becomes a page number. It also flags common crossovers—cleanliness, coating, harness work—so the right spec shows up in the SWI (standard work instruction) and traveler. Use it to pick the rule, quote the section, and move on with confidence.
A.1 Read this first (how to use standards)
- Hierarchy: Customer spec/drawing ➝ referenced standard (latest rev) ➝ internal SWI. When they conflict, ask—don’t guess.
- Classes:
- Class 1: General.
- Class 2: Most EMS work (service life expected).
- Class 3: High performance/critical.
Class drives acceptance limits and what’s reworkable.
- Words matter: “Shall” = mandatory, “Should” = recommendation.
- Evidence: quote section/table numbers in your traveler or ECN; attach photos/measurements.
A.2 Most-used standards by topic (one page you can live on)
Tip: keep IPC-A-610 + J-STD-001 + 7711/7721 at every line PC. Those three solve 80% of arguments.
A.3 Fast acceptance cues (Class 2 unless noted)
(Always verify numbers in the current standard—use this as memory joggers.)
A.4 Quick “which Class?” cheat (when customers don’t specify)
- Consumer/office gear: default Class 2.
- Industrial controls, telecom base, pro A/V: Class 2 (sometimes Class 3 for safety-critical).
- Avionics, medical life-support, downhole, military: Class 3 unless the contract says otherwise.
When in doubt, ask and document the decision in the traveler.
A.5 Inspection & rework triad (who governs what)
A.6 Handy cross-refs for daily questions
- “What footprint should I use?” → IPC-7351 (land pattern), then your paste aperture rules (IPC-7525).
- “Board finish good enough to assemble?” → J-STD-003 (PCB solderability).
- “Parts wetting okay?” → J-STD-002 (component solderability).
- “How clean is clean?” → J-STD-001 program + IPC-TM-650 method callout.
- “Harness crimp looks short—reject?” → IPC/WHMA-A-620 figure & table.
- “Coating blobs near connector—okay?” → IPC-CC-830 + IPC-A-610 coating keepouts.
- “What trace/space & creepage can I use?” → IPC-2221/2222 with your voltage/environment.
A.7 Pocket checklist (how to cite standards in your build)
- Class specified on traveler (1/2/3).
- Latest rev confirmed in the cell library/PLM.
- SWIs reference exact section/table numbers (not just the book title).
- Rework tickets cite 7711/7721 method IDs.
- Incoming/FAI forms list J-STD-002/003 when solderability is in scope.
- Coating/cleaning steps cite CC-830 and TM-650 methods where required.
- Traceability depth matches IPC-1782 level in the control plan.