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5 sessions (Live Online) 4 hours per session
This course has been greatly enhanced and now covers designing high speed circuits up to 112 Gbit/s and beyond. New sections include 112+ Gbit traces, vias, shielding crosstalk, trace routing, signal loss, high speed PCB materials, 112-224 Gbit new technologies and much more.
PLEASE NOTE:
Important: You will find your overall experience and learning outcomes are much improved on this course by having active 2-way dialog with the course instructor, as well as interaction with other attendees. In that respect we highly recommend that you make provision for enabled webcams when attending.
This highly practical course is designed to take the student through the entire process involved in designing and fabricating high-speed PCBs. It begins with the fundamentals of electromagnetic fields and the behavior of transmission lines that are the basis for all high-speed signaling. From there, it examines all the aspects of high-speed design leading to the development of a robust set of PCB design rules that accounts for power subsystem design, routing rules, and design of PCB stack-ups as well as the fabrication rules needed to balance performance against cost and manufacturability.
The materials and examples used in this course are drawn from actual designs of high-speed systems in current manufacture. These examples range from video games to terabit routers and cover the complete range of designs. The design process presented is based on many years of completing designs that are “right the first time”. Attendees are shown many ways to improve their design process so that designs meet this objective. Reliable methods for controlling and containing EMI will also be thoroughly covered.
This course places special emphasis on very high-speed differential signaling protocols such as XAUI, HyperTransport, PCI Express, InfiniBand, SATA, SSCSI, Ethernet, USB, HDMI, and others that are the backbone of modern computing. Actual circuits are built and tested and then modeled to correlate modeling techniques. The topic of how to design power delivery systems capable of supporting these protocols is also addressed.
The course draws substantially from this real-time experience with state-of-the-art components, fabricators, and materials. It also draws heavily on the design of backplanes and daughter boards containing thousands of high speed double-digit gigabit signal paths as well as some special cases with data paths exceeding 224Gb/s.
This course is important to engineers and designers who are being asked to design PCBs and systems that have data channels operating above 1 Gb/S. to as high as 224 Gb/S.
It describes how to handle multiple (sometimes as many as 29) high current, low voltage power supplies present in these new products.
It also covers in detail how to design the transmission lines required by these signals in such a way that they have the bandwidth and low skew required for stable operation.
This course is also of value to new engineers and designers who are looking for a comprehensive introduction to high-speed system design.
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· Design engineers · System architects · EMC specialists · Signal integrity engineers · Technicians · PCB layout professionals |
· Applications engineers · IC designers · IC package designers · Test engineers · PCB Fabricators · Design & Engineering managers |
Electronic designs of all kinds are operating with increasingly faster clock rates and rise times. At the same time, the pressure to complete designs in fewer design cycles is putting pressure on design teams to deliver designs to manufacturing that are “right the first time”. To account for the normal variations in component edge rates, propagation delay variations, amplifier gains, logic levels, and variations in the PCB fabrication process, it is necessary to invoke the use of design tools and methods that allow “preroute” analysis to ensure the final product is designed correctly. With the speeds of signals and components rising into the multi-gigahertz range, relying on the traditional breadboarding or hardware prototyping process often results in a product never making it to market.
This increase in component speed has made it necessary for all design engineers to master the design techniques that were once only the province of supercomputer engineers. This course relies heavily on the proven methods developed for supercomputers and terabit routers. It also draws on experience with disc drives and high-performance video games.
Problems Addressed in This Course:
The course includes:
Session 1
Session 2
Session 3
Session 4
Session-5

Lee Ritchey is one of the industry´s premier authorities on high-speed PCB and system design. He has participated in the design of more than 3000 high-speed PCBs ranging from PC motherboards and elevator controllers to the backplanes used in terabit routers. He is currently involved in the design of several supercomputer class products as well as video games and servers of all kinds.
He has taught this course and others to more than 10,000 engineers and designers throughout the world, including virtually all major suppliers of equipment to the Internet and the Cloud.
Chuck Corley is one of the industry’s foremost high speed digital design and signal integrity experts. He was nicknamed "MacGyver" for his ability to solve complex technical problems when others had failed. He helped design many of the Tech Industry's leading products – the ones that pushed up to the “bleeding edge” of highest clock speeds and complexity.
Chuck's designs include core Internet networking and Telecom transport hardware, WIFI technology, Cellular 2G/3G/4G/5G technology, phased array radar, automotive radar, satellite communications, microwave instrumentation, and more. His design teams have received many industry awards, including the “Best of the Best” award.
In addition to his design work, over the last 40+ years Chuck has taught engineering classes at Universities and private companies to help both new and experienced engineers reach the cutting edge of High Speed Digital Circuit Design, Signal Integrity, PCB Design, Design for Manufacturing, and Design for Reliability.
| 08 Dec 2025 | ONLINE Americas | Enquire |
| 23 Feb 2026 | ONLINE Americas | Enquire |
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