Hi Kirkus,
>>> ... assume the "perfect storm" where all the errors just happen to add up in the worst way.<<<
"Monte Carlo" analysis, OK... the inventor must have lost it ALL then - worst case.
BUT he did not consider any form of 'synergy'. The importance of synergy has been pointed out over and over, in fact lots and lots of times by Raul himself :-)
Must be some concession to this 0.075% perfection.
I worked in pcb, and later semiconductor assembly, that gives me that practical bias what can be done if it gets 'commercially' viable.
No way to have much better then 1% components on a tape-fed bonder doing SMDs, as I mentioned earlier.
Also no way to start improving tolerances after the stuff (not only SMDs) are on the pcb. (Note: >3x rework = reject)
I have a pretty good idea, that this is where some realism in terms of tolerances has to prevail, meaning ALL hand build, bespoke, and nothing done 'commercially' will qualify --- seriously, that doesn't float my boat yet.
Why? Because a lot of 'bespoke' products have plenty more hidden QA issues then something more 'commercial', where errors have been weeded out to a much higher degree.
>>> ... assume the "perfect storm" where all the errors just happen to add up in the worst way.<<<
"Monte Carlo" analysis, OK... the inventor must have lost it ALL then - worst case.
BUT he did not consider any form of 'synergy'. The importance of synergy has been pointed out over and over, in fact lots and lots of times by Raul himself :-)
Must be some concession to this 0.075% perfection.
I worked in pcb, and later semiconductor assembly, that gives me that practical bias what can be done if it gets 'commercially' viable.
No way to have much better then 1% components on a tape-fed bonder doing SMDs, as I mentioned earlier.
Also no way to start improving tolerances after the stuff (not only SMDs) are on the pcb. (Note: >3x rework = reject)
I have a pretty good idea, that this is where some realism in terms of tolerances has to prevail, meaning ALL hand build, bespoke, and nothing done 'commercially' will qualify --- seriously, that doesn't float my boat yet.
Why? Because a lot of 'bespoke' products have plenty more hidden QA issues then something more 'commercial', where errors have been weeded out to a much higher degree.