rigid flexible circuit prototype
My name is jack and I am in the market for rigid flexible circuit
 board design, prototyping, and - in time - production. I am working 
with a company based out of US that has been in the businesses of 
manufacturing agricultural-industrial grain moisture meters for decades.
 Steinlite is currently developing a new model of meter that meets the 
most recent industry certifications. We have already prototyped a 
partial application of flex circuit technology in this device. I suspect
 that you can help us minimize or even eliminate costs and problems with
 a more robust application of rigid flex circuit design.
The
 application in question is a proprietary temperature measurement 
circuit made up of two parts: A four-wire probe and a traditional PCB. 
The
 probe is a very basic flex circuit, consisting of a set of long, thin 
copper traces and a stiffener that acts as a frame. The copper traces of
 the probe are soldiered to the PCB to form the complete temperature 
measurement system. The probe sits in a funnel that receives grain 
samples. The stiffener provides a means by which to anchor the probe. 
The area containing the copper traces does not necessarily need to be 
flexible. It needs to thin, or have a low thermal mass to allow for 
extremely rapid and accurate temperature measurement. As the images 
below suggest, this circuit will be continuously exposed to light 
abrasion in the form of corn, soy, wheat, and lima beans. The expected 
lifespan of an agricultural grain moisture meter is 20 years. One of the
 first problems that we need to solve is one of confidence that this 
light abrasion will not allow the “skin” of the flex circuit to wear in a
 way that would cause the copper traces to be exposed to the environment
 or the moisture in the grain samples. Abrasion aside, any long-term 
penetration of oxygen or other corroding elements would cause the copper
 trace to react differently and, therefore, the reading to drift. To 
summarize, the "skin" or other coating atop these  traces needs to 
insulate the copper from corrosion, oxidation, moisture, and abrasion 
for 20 years. Tall order, eh? 
We
 would also like to place three components (2xRTDs and a resistor) in 
the middle of the copper probe area. These components would need to be 
similarly shielded from the environment and moisture in the grain 
samples. I have imagined that a potting compound would achieve this end.
 This will come up again in the latter half of the email. 
The
 second and third problems go hand in hand. First, this method requires 
us to manufacture and connect two boards. Second, it is relatively easy 
to tear the flexible leads that connect the two rigid bodies during the 
installation process. I would like to investigate combining the probe 
and PCB. The resulting board would be rigid except for a large area 
where the copper traces would be. This flexible portion would also 
harbor the aforementioned three components (2xRTDs and a resistor). 
The
 fourth problem with our current application is a vulnerability to the 
abundant moist grain dust that will accrue on every unmolested surface 
of the device over product’s lifespan of two decades. Ideally, the 
combined probe and PCB would be in some way dust-proof and vapor-proof. 
As noted above, I have imagined that this could be achieved with some 
sort of potting compound, but I am not a flex circuit fabricator. 
Steinlite
 is not a high volume manufacturer. We estimate that we will sell 200 of
 this model per year post federal certification process. We are 
interested in design services that would perform the combination of the 
probe and PCB. We are also in the market for a party that could modify 
the current software that drives the temperature measurement system.  
I
 have attached two board build packages to this email. The PES060R1 
package is for the temperature probe. The PES058R3 package is the rigid flexible PCB.
 I do not expect that you will use these packages to make any 
combination happen. In fact, I would ask that you do not at this time. I
 am far more interested in your thoughts on using flex technology to 
solve the above problems. These builds are attached for your reference 
in providing said feedback. If you are confident that a more robust 
application of flex technology could solve these problems, I would like 
to continue the conversation with more specifics. Thank you for your 
time and consideration. 



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