Originally posted by Jared Purdy
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I do all my own PCB design, and have for decades. I think my first one was in about 1972. I can do a PCB design for something like a tube amp in about an afternoon. A company farming out a PCB design could get it done for a thousand dollars easily. That seems like a lot, but it's so close to zero compared to the other things to be done to get an amp design started that to a first approximation, it's free.
In manufacturing things, you have to always balance the cost of parts and the cost of labor. For a person, recreation-time labor is free, so a single person with a hobby almost always maximizes labor and minimizes parts cost. For a company, parts are hugely less expensive due to volume buying, and buying labor is a continuous misery given the care and feeding people need and the incessant meddling of governments in labor. A manufacturer will minimize labor. This is why the manufacturing world is racing to the bottom on labor costs. Factories in China are racing to build "offshore" factories in much lower-wage Vietnam, and thinking about setting up shop in Africa.
It is important that whomever lays out the PCB knows what signal does what electronically, as has been said. The electronics designer and PCB layout guy need to be the same guy if possible, and need to talk for about an hour a day at minimum during the layout process.
And the third guy, the mechanical engineer that's designing the box and chassis needs to have about an hour a day with the PCB guy and the electronics guy. If you can make these three people the same guy, design and layout is fast and effective. But it's not impossible or terribly expensive in the scheme of things to hire them done. And it's not all that much more expensive to do it well if you know what to do .
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