@atmasphere Ralph, perhaps I can help a little with SMT question (although you may already know all this) . Suggestion to use wave soldering for your production is nonsense. It was replaced by reflow soldering more than decade ago. The only all SMD done with wave soldering today are low density high production quantity boards (wave soldering is a little faster than reflow). Even mixed boards are today soldered with reflow ovens + selective soldering (mini solder fountain). Limitation of wave soldering is at about 20 mil pitch, but board has to be designed for that (orientation of components) and everything else has to be perfect. It is perhaps good for 25mil pitch only (compromised adhesion of thin solder dam between pins causes shorts). Also, board has to be designed for wave soldering in mind since recommended component land areas are different - wider (take more space). I would design everything for reflow. Hand soldering prototype with 50mil pitch components is easy. I can do 25mil pitch large chips with 3D magnifier (Mantis) and micro soldering iron, but it is time consuming. I've seen technicians who can solder 20mils. For discrete components 0402 is the limit (already hard to rework). 0603 is practical and easy. Best bet for small operation soldering would be manual stencil and small 4 zone reflow oven (bigger number of zones is mostly for production speed - faster conveyer belt). Vapor Phase (drawer style) soldering might be also a good option (more accurate). Better yet leave it to good Assembly House. They make prototype quantities and small batches. They often can buy parts at lower cost. I went thru about 10 assembly houses before I found one that is wonderful. Location doesn't really matter since you send them zip file and they ship back boards (leave everything to them!). Novatronix in Chicago area is the best I know. Sure, it will cost you more in prototype quantity, not to mention set-up charges, but debugging and testing poorly made board can cost you a lot of time (and frustration, and wrong decisions). I went thru all this.
For your size of operation Altium software is most likely optimal.
Sorry, for all these details, but it goes toward possibility of making own design class D SMT boards vs using standard off the shelf modules. The answer is - yes it can be done, many ways.
For your size of operation Altium software is most likely optimal.
Sorry, for all these details, but it goes toward possibility of making own design class D SMT boards vs using standard off the shelf modules. The answer is - yes it can be done, many ways.