Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - (Page 6) Caveat Lector Spin Cycle T he recent events in Myanmar and China are unspeakable. At last count, the massive earthquake that rocked central China on May 12 cost at least 50,000 lives and left more than five million homeless. The infrastructure of Sichuan Province – roads, schools, buildings – is no more. Just 10 days earlier, Myanmar was engulfed in a horrendous cyclone that killed at least 100,000 persons – due to the nation’s secretive military ruling junta, the exact count may never be known – and left up to 2.5 million people destitute. In China, major electronics manufacturers appear to have escaped damage from the quake. Among the major companies issuing statements, it appears the worst of the damage amounted to a few fallen ceiling tiles. In Chengdu, 55 miles south of the quake’s epicenter, staff and inventories at Intel’s chip test and assembly plant in Chengdu were unhurt, although the company shut down operations temporarily to assess possible damage. In Suzhou, about 600 miles east of the epicenter, home to a host of the world’s top electronics manufacturers and suppliers, some companies are reporting plant closures for inspections, but no injuries or damage have been reported. Fortunately, the Three Gorges Dam, a nearly 600 ft. high, 1.2-mile long structure that pools the Yangtze River into a lake some 410 miles long, was unscathed. This is critical, as there are a reported 30-plus million people who live adjacent to the dam and whose lives would be at least disrupted, and at worst lost, should it fail. As I’ve noted before, the Three Gorges Dam is highly controversial because, among other things, it resides atop the Jiuwanxi and Zigui-Badong faults, two of the largest fault lines in Asia. Each time engineers raise the water level in the reservoir, the earth surrounding the dam moves, at times with deadly consequences. In the seven months after engineers increased the reservoir level to 512 ft., in fall 2006, the Chinese Academy of Engineering reported 822 tremors. Next year, plans call for hiking the dam’s water level to its full 575-ft. capacity. When that happens, even more seismic activity is sure to follow, geologists and seismologists are convinced. China and Myanmar are worlds apart in size and global importance, but their rulers share distinct and not-so-positive similarities: a lack of openness, an unwillingness to follow best practices, a lack of Circuits Assembly JUNE 2008 institutional oversight, a desperate need to hold onto power at all costs. China has for years followed an aggressive economic expansion strategy, but buildingat-any-cost tactics eventually take a toll. And the Chinese government would never cave to international pressure: Doing so would be considered a sign of weakness, an absolute no-no in a nation where “face” trumps all. In the rush to offer Wall Street a “China solution,” many companies suppressed consideration of the longer-term issues, such as what, exactly, do we do if an earthquake or flood or other catastrophe strikes our main facility (which has happened), or if the government decides to move our plants (ditto) or if, God forbid, China and the US face off in some arena other than sports or world trade? With China getting more expensive by the day, we are seeing a steady stream of migration to India, Vietnam and other places along the Pacific Rim. Companies like Intel have long known the wisdom of spreading their eggs among many baskets. The world’s leading microprocessor company has six wafer fabs across three time zones in the US, plus three more in Ireland and Israel. Its assembly and test sites are China, Costa Rica, Malaysia, the Philippines and the US. If tragedy or Mother Nature strikes, Intel is prepared. (And unlike much of Sichuan Province, Intel plants are built to earthquake standards.) North America may be expensive, occasionally corrupt (Mexico’s specialty), bellicose and politically onerous (that would be the US). It’s also a place where your assets will be protected, where governments are stable, where building codes are demanding and followed, and where risk is, generally speaking, the lowest. A 7.1 magnitude quake rocks San Francisco in 1989, a scant 50 miles from the heart of Silicon Valley, and just a handful of people die and businesses are up and running in days, if they shut down at all. Hurricane Andrew devastates southern Florida and the panhandle region, but only 15 lives are lost. The two largest buildings in New York City are blown up, and we absorb the hit and go back to business, sadder and wiser, but more unified than ever. I hope China learns its lessons from the Sichuan earthquake. But we would be wise to spread our eggs around, just in case they don’t. Mike Buetow, Editor-in-Chief mbuetow@upmediagroup.com 6 circuitsassembly.com http://circuitsassembly.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Circuits Assembly - June 2008 Circuits Assembly - June 2008 Contents Letters Caveat Lector Industry News Market Watch Talking Heads Screen Printing Better Manufacturing China Goes ‘Upmarket’ Out of the Garage Improving Production Line Performance Manufacturing Steps Onto the Enterprise IT Stage Measuring and Controlling Wave Height and Dwell Time Wave Soldering Tech Tips Test and Inspection Process Doctor Pb-Free Lessons Learned Getting Lean Eastern Advances Semicon West Product Preview Product Spotlight Ad Index Assembly Insider Technical Abstracts Circuits Assembly - June 2008 Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Circuits Assembly - June 2008 (Page Cover1) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Circuits Assembly - June 2008 (Page Cover2) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Circuits Assembly - June 2008 (Page 1) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Circuits Assembly - June 2008 (Page 2) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Letters (Page 4) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Letters (Page 5) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Caveat Lector (Page 6) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Caveat Lector (Page 7) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Industry News (Page 8) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Industry News (Page 9) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Industry News (Page 10) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Industry News (Page 11) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Industry News (Page 12) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Industry News (Page 13) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Industry News (Page 14) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Industry News (Page 15) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Market Watch (Page 16) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Talking Heads (Page 17) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Screen Printing (Page 18) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Screen Printing (Page 19) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Better Manufacturing (Page 20) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Better Manufacturing (Page 21) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - China Goes ‘Upmarket’ (Page 22) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - China Goes ‘Upmarket’ (Page 23) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Out of the Garage (Page 24) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Out of the Garage (Page 25) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Improving Production Line Performance (Page 26) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Improving Production Line Performance (Page 27) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Manufacturing Steps Onto the Enterprise IT Stage (Page 28) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Manufacturing Steps Onto the Enterprise IT Stage (Page 29) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Measuring and Controlling Wave Height and Dwell Time (Page 30) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Measuring and Controlling Wave Height and Dwell Time (Page 31) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Measuring and Controlling Wave Height and Dwell Time (Page 32) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Wave Soldering (Page 33) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Tech Tips (Page 34) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Tech Tips (Page 35) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Test and Inspection (Page 36) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Process Doctor (Page 37) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Process Doctor (Page 38) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Pb-Free Lessons Learned (Page 39) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Getting Lean (Page 40) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Eastern Advances (Page 41) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Eastern Advances (Page 42) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Semicon West Product Preview (Page 43) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Semicon West Product Preview (Page 44) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Product Spotlight (Page 45) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Ad Index (Page 46) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Assembly Insider (Page 47) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Technical Abstracts (Page 48) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Technical Abstracts (Page Cover3) Circuits Assembly - June 2008 - Technical Abstracts (Page Cover4)
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