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Directly soldered wire to board connection strategies for volume production

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redreobingarden

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Hello! We are working on a product that has some wires directly soldered to a PCB. These are internal wires that never move and we have decided that we can save costs by omitting connectors.

I was wondering if there are any best practices on this. At this point I'm aware of only two ways of doing this:

1. Plated thru-hole on the PCB. Stripped+tinned wire goes in plated thru-hole, solder+soldering iron applied to make the joint.

2. Sufficiently large pad on PCB that can be covered in a layer of solder from either a wave-soldering or re-flow process. Operator then just has to place a stripped and tinned wire on the pre-soldered pad and hit it with a soldering iron.

It seems that if there is space available on the PCB, number 2 is the best option? Are there any other options that you guys have had experience with? Thanks!
 
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#2 might be easier, but it's also makes it a lot easier to rip the pad off the board. I wouldn't do it without some kind of strain relief. You could drill a hole or two through the PCB and route the wire through them to add some strain relief.
 

And, some hot melt glue would help keeping the wires in place, in case they break at the solder point.
 

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