7.3 Test Process Quality (ICT/FCT & Retest Limits)
Testing is not a value-added process; it is an interrogation. A test station does not fix quality; it merely segregates the survivors from the casualties. In high-volume manufacturing, the most dangerous behavior is "Testing Into Compliance"—the act of re-testing a failed unit until it luckily passes. This is statistical roulette. If a unit fails once, it is suspect. If it passes on the second try without repair, it is a latent defect waiting to fail in the field. The goal of Test Process Quality is to stop the "Freshman Flush" and enforce strict retest logic.
In-Circuit Test (ICT): The Structural Audit
ICT is the electrical equivalent of an X-Ray. It verifies components are present, oriented correctly, and not shorted. It does not prove the device works; it proves the device was built to the schematic.
False Call Management:
ICT fixtures rely on "pogo pins" contacting test points. Dust, flux residue, or slightly warped PCBs cause False Fails.
- Metric: First Pass Yield (FPY) must be > 95%.
- Logic:
- IF FPY drops below 90%:
- THEN Stop Line. Clean fixture pins and verify strain gauge stress. Do not adjust test limits to "pass" the noise.
Functional Circuit Test (FCT): The Behavioral Audit
FCT simulates the real-world application. It powers up the board and runs firmware.
The "No Trouble Found" (NTF) Paradox:
A unit fails FCT but passes on the bench.
- Risk: The FCT fixture often imposes mechanical stress or timing constraints different from the final enclosure.
- Action: Correlation analysis. If Bench Pass rate > 90% for FCT failures, the FCT limit set is too tight or the fixture is unstable.
Retest Limits (The "Three Strikes" Rule)
You must define a hard limit on how many times a unit can be cycled through a test station. Infinite loops hide intermittent failures (cold solder joints).
Decision Logic for Retest:
- Pass 1: Unit enters test.
- Result: FAIL.
- Action: Check seating/cables. Retest immediately (Pass 2).
- Pass 2 (Retest):
- Result: PASS.
- Status: "Conditional Pass".
- Risk: Intermittent contact.
- Mandate: Unit must be visually inspected for flux/contamination on pads.
- Result: FAIL.
- Status: Hard Fail. Route to Debug/Bonepile.
- Pass 3:
- PROHIBITED. A unit failing twice is not a "glitch." It is a defect.
- Action: Tag as defective. Do not re-insert into the line.
Bonepile Management
The "Bonepile" is the graveyard of Failed units. It is also the most valuable source of data in the factory.
Rules of Engagement:
- Aging Limit: No unit remains in the Bonepile > 3 shifts (24 hours).
- Disposition: Must be diagnosed (Debugged) or Scrapped.
- WIP Cap: If Bonepile > 50 units, STOP SMT. You are producing scrap faster than you can fix it.
Pro-Tip: Technicians love to "cherry-pick" easy repairs. Enforce "First In, First Out" (FIFO) on the bonepile. If a board sits for 2 weeks, just scrap it—the troubleshooting cost exceeds the material value.
Final Checklist
Control Element | Parameter | Critical Limit / Rule |
Retest Count | Max Attempts | 2 (Initial + 1 Retest) |
FPY Trigger | Yield Floor | < 90% = Stop Line |
Bonepile | WIP Age | < 24 Hours |
Fixture Maint | Pin Cleaning | Every Shift (or per counter) |
Correlation | Bench vs. FCT | Gap < 5% |
Golden Unit | Verification | Run daily to prove tester is sane |