Tekmos Talks
A Newsletter for the Semiconductor Industry 
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November 2014
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Quality & ISO
Packaging
Tekmos Travels
Meet Tekmos
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Tekmos Sale Representatives

Applications for Tekmos Products:
  • Automotive
  • Industrial
  • Military
  • Medical
  • Telecommunications  
The following are standard generic microcontroller devices available from Tekmos.
If you need a similar product not listed, contact Tekmos:  

 

Intel replacements by Tekmos 

TK80C51

TK80C188EB 

TK80C186EB 

TK80C186EC - samples now! 

TK80C188EC - samples now!

 

NXP replacements by Tekmos

TK87C751

TK83C751

TK89C668

 

Freescale replacements by Tekmos

TK68HC11A1

TK68HC11D0

TK68HC11E1

TK68HC11K1

TK68HC711B16 and B32

TK68HC711D3

TK68HC711E9

TK68HC711E20

TK68HC05 series

TK68HC705B series

 TK68HC811E2 - Feature product 

TK68020 - samples now!

 

Intel, NXP and Freescale are registered trademarks by these respective companies.
   


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Welcome to
Tekmos Talks November.  We will be discussing Tekmos' ISO 9001 and new customer survey, Tekmos packaging, "The Geothermal Energy Expo",  and introduce a team member in "Meet Tekmos".
 

Tekmos High Temperature ASIC and High Temperature Micros 175/250C for Extreme Environments...hot chips!
Quality Control & ISO 9001

Tekmos  works hard to provide first-rate customer satisfaction and has completed all required audits and passed re-certification of its ISO 9001.

  Tekmos ISO cert

 Tekmos Quality & Reliability 

 

Tekmos is resolute to provide the best service and highest quality in the industry. With state-of-the art equipment, experienced industry experts and cost productive solutions, Tekmos is dedicated to fulfilling the quality needs of our customers.

 

In that quest for excellence we have enhanced our methods of getting feedback from customers by creating a "Tekmos customer survey" found on our website and provided here for your convenience. We invite you to take the short survey and tell us what you think about our products, customer service, website, or anything else you would like.

 

Tekmos further encourages each customer to conduct an on-site quality audit of our processes and facilities to ensure they receive the quality they deserve when purchasing from us.

  

 For more information about Quality Assurance, please contact

or call 512-342-9871

 

Packaging, by Richard Stallkamp, Director of New Product Development
Tekmos board
PCB
 

The guts of most durable products today contain a lot of electronics. The external package, whether an iPhone, a TV, or even a washing machine, is usually just the outermost package of multiple layers of packaging. In this article, we will look at innermost package type, the packaging that protects the IC (Integrated Circuit, sometimes called a computer chip.)

Today, silicon chips are made with a very large number of transistors arranged to make digital logic. The transistors are very small, allowing hundreds of thousands, sometimes millions, of transistors, to be made on a thumbnail-sized piece of silicon. A major problem is how to connect signal lines and how to protect the IC from damage. Special electronic packages have been developed to accomplish these tasks.

Advances in chip processing techniques have allowed for larger chips with smaller transistors. As this trend toward higher levels of integration (the inclusion of more circuitry onto a piece of silicon) continues, the number of signal lines has also increased. The package size has grown to accommodate the larger number of signal lines.

The demand for the packages with low pin-count has declined significantly. As the volume falls, the economy of scale goes away. The volume decrease causes the unit cost to increase, putting additional downward pressure on its usage. Then another factor comes into play. The tools to produce any given package type are expensive. A plastic package requires not only a mold and a small piece of metal called a lead frame, it also requires tooling for finishing. As these expensive tools wear out, a choice must be made whether to replace them. The manufacturer must decide if possible future revenue justifies the expenditure for the replacement tooling. Often, it is not practical to continue making some package types.

What do you do if you have a product that has a PCB (Printed Circuit Board) designed for a certain package type? If your PCB has a footprint that exactly matches the placement of connections on a particular package type, how do you proceed if nobody makes a package that fits that footprint? One costly approach is to design a new printed circuit board with a footprint for a similar device in a package that is available. The cost to design the new PCB, debug and test it, and update the documentation can be prohibitive. If the PCB was designed a long time ago, the designers may have moved on leaving incomplete documentation. Often manufacturing does not have a budget for design work. Solutions are even more costly when a new design requires a lot of testing such as for FDA approval.    

Tekmos adapter 2

Another proven approach is to use an adapter card that interfaces between the needed footprint on the PCB and the circuit function in an available package. The adapter card cost is often much lower than the PCB redesign cost. Perhaps more importantly, the adapter card becomes a project for the chip maker rather than for the PCB assembler.

Often, Tekmos can design a new silicon chip that performs same circuit function but placed in an available package. Tekmos can also have the adapter card designed and built so that the new packaged IC will mount on it. The adapter card will fit the original footprint. From the contract manufacturer's perspective, there is now a drop-in replacement for the unavailable part.

 

  To Learn More...   

 

For more information contact Bob Abrams, Director of Sales@Tekmos.com  

or call 512-342-9871. 

Inside Tekmos, by Richard Stallkamp



Last month Tekmos traveled to exhibit at another high temperature conference. This time it was the GEA Geothermal Energy Expo 2014 at the Oregon Convention Center in Portland, Oregon. The expo is billed as "the world's largest gathering of vendors providing support for geothermal resource exploration, characterization, development, production and management." Since the folks from Tekmos have spent most of their careers involved with microelectronics, it was fascinating to talk with the attendees and vendors who manufacture and use the massive equipment associated with the geothermal industry. Even though the exploration for and harnessing of geothermal energy makes use of equipment that is thousands of times bigger than our microelectronic circuitry, many pieces of equipment cannot function without the much smaller electronic components like those that Tekmos designs and manufactures.

    

Tekmos Hot Chips Booth
Lynn Reed & Bob Abrams

The expo gave us a chance to talk in depth with various equipment vendors about the performance and electrical characteristics they need most when choosing components for their new products. We were again reminded of the need to listen carefully and to clarify terms. Some of the vendors at the Expo talked about their requirement for maximum operating temperatures of 300 degrees without mentioning they were speaking in degrees Fahrenheit. Others at the conference needed 250 degrees operating temperature, without mentioning they were speaking in degrees Celsius, the units generally used in the electronics industry. The 300 degrees Fahrenheit, about 150 degrees Celsius, is pretty straight forward for Tekmos using standard bulk silicon technology but 250 degrees Celsius will require our SOI processing.   

This second high temperature conference of the year for Tekmos yielded a number of new contacts as well as a chance to visit with other customers that we have known for some time. We also received a number of inquiries about our standard products where the high temperatures are not required. There were even some inquiries about Tekmos supplying parts that are going obsolete by the original vendors. While this has been a major focus of Tekmos throughout its 17 year history, we were a little surprised since our focus at this geothermal conference was "Hot Chips", our relatively recent thrust into the high temperature market.

  

Porltand Lan Su Chinese Garden
Lan Su Chinese Garden

 

 

As we often do, we also took some time to visit a local attraction. We had a tasty lunch at a great Chinese restaurant suggested to us by a local who thought we looked lost as we got off the light rail. We were primed for our visit to Portland's Lan Su Chinese Garden, the most authentic Suzhou-style Chinese garden outside China. Its name is poetically interpreted as "Garden of Awakening Orchids." It was assembled by 65 Chinese artisans who spent 10 months assembling and completing structures that were crafted in China. From the Hall of Brocade Clouds, past the Scholars Courtyard, to the Tower of Cosmic Reflections, the Garden is a sea of tranquility near center of the bustling city of Portland. It was a welcome period of peace and quiet between our travel to Portland and our manning the booth at the Geothermal Expo.
 

 

 

   

 

Meet Tekmos

Alan Reed, Tekmos Alan Reed, I.T. Administrator 

How long have you been at Tekmos and what brought your here?

I have been working on and off for the past 6 years, and full time for the past 6 months.

What are your responsibilities here at Tekmos?

I am responsible for the programmer we send to customers, IT problems, and implementing an electronic workflow system.

What are your favorite tasks or projects to work on here at Tekmos? 

My favorite task has been to work on the programmer we send to customers. I have always enjoyed creating something from scratch and continually adding to it.

What Project are you working on now?

I am currently working on implementing an electronic workflow system using the program Alfresco

.

 

Please tell us about your professional and educational background.

I graduated from Westlake High school and attended the University of North Texas where I studied Computer Science. During my breaks I would work for Tekmos, and that turned into a full time job.

 



Thank you for reading Tekmos Talks. Contact  Bob Abrams, Vice President of Sales & Business Development, call (512) 342-9871 or email Sales for more information on our most recent "tape outs", our "Hot Chips", or our other quality products.

Please share any comments, compliments and or requests by taking part in our Customer Survey provided here for your convenience. Customers come first at Tekmos and we appreciate you.

 

Sincerely,

 

Lynn Reed, President
 
4120 Commercial Center Drive, Suite 400
Austin, TX 78744
Phone: (512) 342-9871
Fax: (512) 342-9873