Insights
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7 PCB component placement rules — and how AI applies them
Bad placement causes problems that no amount of careful routing can fix. Here's what experienced engineers know — and how AI applies it.
💡 At a glance
Placement mistakes typically lead to signal interference, thermal hotspots, or manufacturing defects — and they're easy to miss until something goes wrong.
The most common errors follow recognizable patterns, and those patterns can all be expressed as rules.
AI placement tools are trained on exactly these rules. They apply them automatically and explain the reasoning behind each decision — so you can review the output, not just accept it.
In PCB design, placement comes before routing — and it matters more than most beginners expect. A board with poor component placement will run into the same signal integrity and thermal problems no matter how carefully the traces are routed. The frustrating part is that these issues often aren't visible until the board is already built.
What follows is a breakdown of the placement principles that experienced engineers have internalized over years of hands-on work — the kind of knowledge that usually only comes from making the mistakes yourself.



