- Pain Point Solved: Common issues in micro-connector electroformed molds—0.005–0.01mm pinhole diameter 偏差 and uneven pin spacing—leading to connector contact failure (e.g., smartphone charging interruptions) and 20%+ part scrap.
- Core Value: Achieve ±0.002mm pinhole/spacing accuracy, cut scrap costs by 45%, and meet electronics industry IPC-A-610 standards for micro-connectors.
First, clarify specs tied to connector functionality—no vague targets:
- Pinhole Precision: For USB-C or board-to-board connectors, confirm pinhole diameter tolerance (e.g., 0.1mm ±0.002mm) and inner wall smoothness (Ra ≤0.008μm, to avoid signal loss).
- Spacing Consistency: Parallel pins need ≤0.003mm spacing deviation (even 0.005mm off causes “misalignment" with sockets).
- Heya Support: Free micro-connector spec review—we flag high-risk points (e.g., “0.08mm ultra-small pinholes need special electrolyte 配比") before mold production.
Client Example: A smartphone connector client ignored “pinhole inner wall roughness" and had 30% contact failure—we added Ra ≤0.008μm to specs and fixed the issue.
The master mold (electroforming’s “blueprint") is the root of 60% spacing/pinhole deviations. Use this Heya-proven chart:
Micro-Connector Type | Recommended Master Mold Material | Core Advantage | Heya Application Example |
---|---|---|---|
Ultra-small pinholes (≤0.1mm) | Single-Crystal Silicon | High dimensional stability (±0.001mm) + easy micro-etching | USB-C connector pin molds |
High-density pins (≥20 pins/cm) | Fused Quartz | Low thermal expansion (avoids spacing drift) | Laptop board-to-board connector molds |
Low-cost mass production | Photoresist (AZ 4620) | Fast pattern-making for pin spacing | Wireless earbud charging connector molds |
Pinhole deviations often come from uneven metal deposition—focus on these 2 key settings:
- Electrolyte Formula: For nickel electroformed molds (most common for connectors), use “sulfuric acid nickel + 0.05% saccharin" to reduce pinhole inner wall “nodules" (rough spots).
- Current Density: Keep it low (1.2–1.5 A/dm²) for pinholes—higher density (≥2 A/dm²) causes “over-deposition" (thicker pinhole walls, smaller actual diameter).
- Heya Edge: We use automated electrolyte mixing (±0.01% concentration accuracy) and real-time current monitoring—no more manual errors.
Most factories check deviations only after the mold is done—we insert a critical inspection at 70% deposition:
- Tool to Use: Confocal laser microscope (measures pinhole diameter/spacing in 20 seconds per feature).
- Action If Off-Spec: For minor spacing drift (e.g., 0.004mm), adjust cathode position by 0.002mm to correct; for pinhole diameter ,tweak current density by 0.1 A/dm².
- Case Result: A client skipped this step and had 50 defective molds—with Heya’s in-process inspection, their deviation rate dropped to 3%.
Rough demolding ruins 20% of otherwise good molds—follow these rules:
- Demolding Method: Use “low-temperature release" (50–60℃) instead of mechanical prying (avoids pin bending or spacing shift).
- Deburring: For pinhole edges, use 0.01mm diamond files (by hand, with 10x magnification) to remove burrs (sharp edges cause socket damage).
- Heya Guarantee: All micro-connector molds get 3 rounds of post-processing inspection (pinhole diameter, spacing, roughness) before delivery.