Project Overview and Analysis

3:03

Project
BOM
PCB Layout
Review (ERC/DRC)
Schematic
Layout

Evaluating schematic intents.

Analyzing project components.

Reviewing connections and components.

Checking PCB layout and components.

Using Knowledge Base Tool.

Using Schematic Tool.

Using BOM Tool.

Using PCB Layout Tool.

Using Review (ERC/DRC) Tool.

Establishing component linking rules.

Here’s a clear read of your current Flux project based on the schematic, BOM, layout index, and automated reviews.
Project overview and likely purpose
  • This is an early-stage interconnect/test fixture board. It brings two 5-pin connectors into a simple wiring harness, with additional contact points via spring “pogo” pins and a single terminal pad.
  • Functionality is incomplete: only one multi-node net is actually tied together. Most pins are still unconnected (placeholders), and GND isn’t used yet.
Core components and roles
  • Connectors:
    • J1 and J2: 5-pin through-hole receptacles intended as the primary I/O interfaces.
  • Access/auxiliary:
    • P2: a single-pad terminal for quick access or clip lead connection.
    • Net portals such as D1 (also D2–D6 and several “G” portals): schematic-only connectivity markers to group/bridge nets.
    • Multiple pogo pins (spring contacts) are present but many are unannotated; at least one pogo pin appears to share the “G” refdes, which conflicts with the “G” net portals.
  • Mechanics:
    • M1, M2, M3: M3 mounting holes for securing the board.
How the circuit is currently connected
  • Nets:
    • Net 14 connects J1 pins 1 and 5 to J2 pins 1 and 5, and also to one pogo pin instance labeled “G:P1”. This looks like a deliberate shorting/pass-through group for those positions.
    • Other nets (Net 2, 3, 12, 15, 16, 22) each connect to a single connector pin only—no destinations yet. They are likely placeholders for future wiring.
    • GND exists as a net but has no connections yet.
  • No active components or power regulation are present. There’s no decoupling, protection, or logic—just interconnects.
Design, implementation, and interactions
  • Architecture: a very light interconnect layer between two 5-pin headers with optional access via pogo pins and a single terminal pad.
  • Schematic organization: heavy use of Net Portals (D1–D6 and many “G”) to mark intended groupings before final wiring. This is common early on but should converge to named nets and clear destinations.
  • Layout: components are indexed in the PCB layout, but there’s no routed connectivity yet and the outline appears as placeholder rectangles.
Key technologies and dependencies
  • Through-hole 2.54 mm, 5-position connectors for easy cable/header mating: J1, J2.
  • Pogo-pin spring contacts for temporary contact and fixture-style access (unannotated in places).
  • Net Portals for quick logical grouping during schematic drafting.
Design choices, trade-offs, and optimizations
  • Using pogo pins enables fast temporary connections (great for test/bed-of-nails/programming) but requires careful mechanical alignment and may introduce small, variable contact resistance. Trade-off: convenience vs stability/precision.
  • Net Portals are convenient for sketching connections, but final documentation/readability improves with explicit net names and visible wire/label connections. Best practice: use standard GND symbols for ground rather than portals to aid readability and copper pours.
  • Two 5-pin connectors give a compact footprint; if signal count or shielding grows, consider higher pin-count or shielded alternatives later.
Potential challenges and performance considerations
  • Mechanical alignment: pogo pins must align precisely with the mating device pads. Misalignment causes intermittent contact or wear.
  • Contact reliability: pogo contacts can bounce or oxidize; plan for adequate plating and stroke management; ensure the board has robust fixturing (your M3 holes help).
  • Signal integrity: for higher-speed or sensitive signals, pogo pins and long leads can add inductance/resistance; pairing with ground and controlling wiring length helps.
  • ESD/overvoltage: external-facing connectors often need ESD/TVS diodes and series resistors; none are present yet.
  • Documentation: several parts lack unique refdes; some share the “G” designator, which can cause confusion and BOM/DRC friction.
Automated review status
  • ERC/DRC summary: Manufacturing Part Number errors on M1, M2, M3 (MPNs are optional for mounting holes but clearing the warning keeps reviews clean).
  • No missing footprints flagged. Many nets are intentionally incomplete at this stage.
Real-world applications
  • Programming and test fixtures (bed-of-nails), quick pass-through boards for harness bring-up, probe access points for debugging.
Areas for improvement (near term)
  • Finish connectivity:
    • Decide and wire how J1 pins 2–4 map to J2 pins 2–4 (or to pogo pins/P2).
    • If a common reference is needed, tie GND with the standard GND symbol and propagate to connectors/pogo pins as appropriate.
  • Clean up refdes:
    • Give every pogo pin a unique refdes; avoid reusing “G”. Unique refdes prevent BOM ambiguity and layout confusion.
    • Replace “G” net portals used as pseudo-ground with the canonical GND symbol for clarity and proper copper pour behavior.
  • Labeling and documentation:
    • Name nets descriptively (e.g., VBUS, SCL, SDA, TX, RX, DET, etc.).
    • Add silkscreen labels near J1/J2 for pin 1 orientation and function.
  • Protection and robustness:
    • Add ESD/TVS for external-facing lines as needed.
    • Consider series resistors or RC where contact bounce is a risk (e.g., mechanical detect lines).
  • Clear the review items:
    • Either add MPN properties for M1, M2 or mark them deliberately as non-procured mechanicals to silence the MPN review.
Scalability and future enhancements
  • Scale the connector matrix (more pins or additional headers) and standardize a pinout convention; consider making this a reusable module.
  • If signal quality matters, add adjacent grounds or shielding on the connector, and route with defined return paths.
  • Add simple instrumentation: continuity LEDs, a small microcontroller for automated fixture tests, or a level translator if interfacing mixed-voltage targets.
  • Add mechanical guides/stops for pogo alignment and device placement; define the board outline and keep-outs precisely.
Bottom line
  • Today, this is a skeletal harness/fixture board: two 5-pin connectors, mounting holes, portals, a terminal pad, and several pogo pins, with only one multi-node net wired. It’s a solid starting point for a bring-up jig; next steps are to finish net mapping, fix refdes, use GND symbols where appropriate, and add any protection or instrumentation the application needs.
Define pin mapping
Use pogo pins for signals
Fix refdes conflicts
Add ESD protection
Clarify ground implementation
51 days

Ready.


G
G
D5
D3
D2
J1
G
G
D4
D3
J2
G
G
G
D1
D2
D5
D4
G
G
G
P2
D6
D1
D6


  • Ground
    A common return path for electric current. Commonly known as ground.
  • Net Portal
    Wirelessly connects nets on schematic. Used to organize schematics and separate functional blocks. To wirelessly connect net portals, give them same designator. #portal
  • Power Net Portal
    Wirelessly connects power nets on schematic. Identical to the net portal, but with a power symbol. Used to organize schematics and separate functional blocks. To wirelessly connect power net portals, give them the same designator. #portal #power
  • Generic Resistor
    A generic fixed resistor for rapid developing circuit topology. Save precious design time by seamlessly add more information to this part (value, footprint, etc.) as it becomes available. Standard resistor values: 1.0Ω 10Ω 100Ω 1.0kΩ 10kΩ 100kΩ 1.0MΩ 1.1Ω 11Ω 110Ω 1.1kΩ 11kΩ 110kΩ 1.1MΩ 1.2Ω 12Ω 120Ω 1.2kΩ 12kΩ 120kΩ 1.2MΩ 1.3Ω 13Ω 130Ω 1.3kΩ 13kΩ 130kΩ 1.3MΩ 1.5Ω 15Ω 150Ω 1.5kΩ 15kΩ 150kΩ 1.5MΩ 1.6Ω 16Ω 160Ω 1.6kΩ 16kΩ 160kΩ 1.6MΩ 1.8Ω 18Ω 180Ω 1.8KΩ 18kΩ 180kΩ 1.8MΩ 2.0Ω 20Ω 200Ω 2.0kΩ 20kΩ 200kΩ 2.0MΩ 2.2Ω 22Ω 220Ω 2.2kΩ 22kΩ 220kΩ 2.2MΩ 2.4Ω 24Ω 240Ω 2.4kΩ 24kΩ 240kΩ 2.4MΩ 2.7Ω 27Ω 270Ω 2.7kΩ 27kΩ 270kΩ 2.7MΩ 3.0Ω 30Ω 300Ω 3.0KΩ 30KΩ 300KΩ 3.0MΩ 3.3Ω 33Ω 330Ω 3.3kΩ 33kΩ 330kΩ 3.3MΩ 3.6Ω 36Ω 360Ω 3.6kΩ 36kΩ 360kΩ 3.6MΩ 3.9Ω 39Ω 390Ω 3.9kΩ 39kΩ 390kΩ 3.9MΩ 4.3Ω 43Ω 430Ω 4.3kΩ 43KΩ 430KΩ 4.3MΩ 4.7Ω 47Ω 470Ω 4.7kΩ 47kΩ 470kΩ 4.7MΩ 5.1Ω 51Ω 510Ω 5.1kΩ 51kΩ 510kΩ 5.1MΩ 5.6Ω 56Ω 560Ω 5.6kΩ 56kΩ 560kΩ 5.6MΩ 6.2Ω 62Ω 620Ω 6.2kΩ 62KΩ 620KΩ 6.2MΩ 6.8Ω 68Ω 680Ω 6.8kΩ 68kΩ 680kΩ 6.8MΩ 7.5Ω 75Ω 750Ω 7.5kΩ 75kΩ 750kΩ 7.5MΩ 8.2Ω 82Ω 820Ω 8.2kΩ 82kΩ 820kΩ 8.2MΩ 9.1Ω 91Ω 910Ω 9.1kΩ 91kΩ 910kΩ 9.1MΩ #generics #CommonPartsLibrary
  • Generic Capacitor
    A generic fixed capacitor ideal for rapid circuit topology development. You can choose between polarized and non-polarized types, its symbol and the footprint will automatically adapt based on your selection. Supported options include standard SMD sizes for ceramic capacitors (e.g., 0402, 0603, 0805), SMD sizes for aluminum electrolytic capacitors, and through-hole footprints for polarized capacitors. Save precious design time by seamlessly add more information to this part (value, footprint, etc.) as it becomes available. Standard capacitor values: 1.0pF 10pF 100pF 1000pF 0.01uF 0.1uF 1.0uF 10uF 100uF 1000uF 10,000uF 1.1pF 11pF 110pF 1100pF 1.2pF 12pF 120pF 1200pF 1.3pF 13pF 130pF 1300pF 1.5pF 15pF 150pF 1500pF 0.015uF 0.15uF 1.5uF 15uF 150uF 1500uF 1.6pF 16pF 160pF 1600pF 1.8pF 18pF 180pF 1800pF 2.0pF 20pF 200pF 2000pF 2.2pF 22pF 20pF 2200pF 0.022uF 0.22uF 2.2uF 22uF 220uF 2200uF 2.4pF 24pF 240pF 2400pF 2.7pF 27pF 270pF 2700pF 3.0pF 30pF 300pF 3000pF 3.3pF 33pF 330pF 3300pF 0.033uF 0.33uF 3.3uF 33uF 330uF 3300uF 3.6pF 36pF 360pF 3600pF 3.9pF 39pF 390pF 3900pF 4.3pF 43pF 430pF 4300pF 4.7pF 47pF 470pF 4700pF 0.047uF 0.47uF 4.7uF 47uF 470uF 4700uF 5.1pF 51pF 510pF 5100pF 5.6pF 56pF 560pF 5600pF 6.2pF 62pF 620pF 6200pF 6.8pF 68pF 680pF 6800pF 0.068uF 0.68uF 6.8uF 68uF 680uF 6800uF 7.5pF 75pF 750pF 7500pF 8.2pF 82pF 820pF 8200pF 9.1pF 91pF 910pF 9100pF #generics #CommonPartsLibrary
  • Generic Inductor
    A generic fixed inductor for rapid developing circuit topology. *You can now change the footprint and 3D model at the top level anytime you want. This is the power of #generics
  • Terminal
    Terminal
    An electrical connector acting as reusable interface to a conductor and creating a point where external circuits can be connected.
  • RMCF0805JT47K0
    47 kOhms ±5% 0.125W, 1/8W Chip Resistor 0805 (2012 Metric) Automotive AEC-Q200 Thick Film #forLedBlink
  • 875105359001
    10uF Capacitor Aluminum Polymer 20% 16V SMD 5x5.3mm #forLedBlink #commonpartslibrary #capacitor #aluminumpolymer #radialcan
  • CTL1206FYW1T
    Yellow 595nm LED Indication - Discrete 1.7V 1206 (3216 Metric) #forLedBlink
Welcome to your new project. Imagine what you can build here.

Properties

Properties describe core aspects of the project.

Pricing & Availability

Distributor

Qty 1

Arrow

$2.70

Digi-Key

$9.66

LCSC

$2.21

Mouser

$10.83

Verical

$12.11–$12.76

Assets

Test1.svg

Test1.svg

Test1Default
test2.svg

test2.svg

test2
TEST3.SVG

TEST3.SVG

TEST3

Controls