Electronic boards: Avoid these mistakes that sabotage your production!

Introduction

Electronic circuit board assembly (PCBA) is a critical step in any electronics project. Many projects fail or face significant delays, not due to design flaws, but because of industrialization errors.

A validated prototype does not guarantee a mastered production process. Here are the most common mistakes in moving to mass production — and how to avoid them.


What is Electronic Circuit Board Assembly (PCBA)?

PCBA involves integrating electronic components onto a printed circuit board (PCB) through:

  • Surface mount soldering (SMT)
  • Through-hole components
  • Wave soldering operations
  • Quality controls (AOI, functional testing)

An electronic manufacturer or EMS does more than assemble; they industrialize the product.


1. Designing Without Considering Manufacturability (DFM)

A frequent mistake is designing a PCB optimized for the lab but not for production.

Common issues:

  • Non-standard footprints
  • End-of-life (EOL) components
  • Tight tolerances
  • No component alternatives

Early Design For Manufacturing (DFM) prevents these bottlenecks.

👉 Preparing for series production? Download our specification template to structure your industrialization.


2. Underestimating the Electronics Supply Chain

In 2026, component management is a key factor.

Frequent mistakes:

  • Dependence on a single supplier
  • Critical components without secured stock
  • Poor anticipation of lead times

A structured EMS integrates the supply chain into the industrial strategy.


3. Neglecting the Testing Phase

A defect detected at the end of the line costs far more than one identified early.

A series production process must include:

  • AOI (Automated Optical Inspection)
  • Functional tests
  • Firmware validation
  • Quality controls

The prototype may work; series production must be repeatable.


4. Choosing an Unsuitable Partner for Volume

A prototype-level workshop is not always structured for series production.

Conversely, a large-scale site may lack flexibility for small and medium runs.

A multi-site model can be effective:

  • Local prototype
  • Small European series
  • Optimized volume ramp-up

The key is matching the production facility to the product life cycle, not just geography.


5. Comparing Only Unit Prices

An attractive quote may hide:

  • Absence of DFM analysis
  • Lack of testing
  • Fragile supply chain
  • Limited quality processes

Electronic production must be evaluated holistically.


6. Failing to Anticipate Product Evolution

Products evolve:

  • New PCB version
  • Firmware updates
  • Component adjustments

An EMS must support these evolutions without industrial disruption.


Why These Mistakes Sabotage Production

Because industrialization is often considered too late.

A successful electronics project relies on:

  • Design adapted to production
  • Structured documentation
  • Supply chain management
  • Controlled quality processes

FAQ – Electronic Circuit Board Production

What’s the difference between a prototype and series production?

The prototype validates functionality. Series production requires repeatability, traceability, and cost optimization.

When should industrialization be integrated?

From the moment the schematic and routing are validated.

Should production be exclusively in France?

It depends on volumes and constraints. A multi-site strategy can provide more flexibility.


Conclusion

PCBA mistakes are not technical—they are strategic.

Choosing an electronic subcontractor capable of industrializing, securing, and adapting production is critical for successful series production.

At CoOptek, we support clients with structured industrialization and flexible production, in France and internationally.

👉 Need industrial insight on your project? Schedule a confidential 15-minute discussion.