Unlike other free tools where you design a file and then hope a manufacturer can read it, PCB123 is locked into Sunstone’s manufacturing capabilities.
In the world of electronics design, the gap between a brilliant idea and a functional prototype is often bridged by the tools you use. For engineers, hobbyists, and startups, the challenge has always been finding a Printed Circuit Board (PCB) design tool that is powerful enough for complex layouts but accessible enough to not break the budget. sunstone circuits pcb123
Elena, the night shift layout supervisor, almost deleted it as spam. The design rules were insane. Trace widths of 0.0001 inches—smaller than the wavelength of visible light. Vias so densely packed they looked like a moiré pattern. And the copper layers? One hundred and twenty-three of them. Unlike other free tools where you design a
“That’s impossible,” she muttered, wiping the sleep from her eyes. Standard PCBs had four, maybe eight layers. Twelve if you were building a server. But 123? The board would be an inch thick and cost more than a house. Elena, the night shift layout supervisor, almost deleted