SPRACP4A December 2019 – June 2024 AM67 , AM67A , AM68 , AM68A , AM69 , AM69A , DRA821U , DRA821U-Q1 , DRA829J , DRA829J-Q1 , DRA829V , DRA829V-Q1 , TDA4AEN-Q1 , TDA4AH-Q1 , TDA4AL-Q1 , TDA4AP-Q1 , TDA4VE-Q1 , TDA4VEN-Q1 , TDA4VH-Q1 , TDA4VL-Q1 , TDA4VM , TDA4VM-Q1 , TDA4VP-Q1
Back-drilling is a PCB manufacturing process in which the undesired conductive plating in the stub section of a via is removed. To back-drill, use a drill bit slightly larger in diameter than the drill bit used to create the original via hole. This requires the anti-pad diameter of the via to be increase to fit the drill size (for those layers that are to be removed), to make sure other trace or planes are not affected with via is drilled. When via transitions result in stubs longer than 15mils, back-drill the resulting stubs to reduce insertion losses and to make sure that they do not resonate.