PCBA Assembly Colorado: SMT, Through-Hole, and Mixed Technology: Which Build Strategy Fits Best?

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Choosing the wrong build strategy for a Colorado PCBA program adds cost and complexity before a single board is assembled. For Colorado OEM teams focused on reducing production cycle time, build strategy is one of the most consequential decisions made before layout is finalized. The choice between SMT, through-hole, and mixed technology affects tooling, process sequencing, yield, and per-unit cost at volume, and it needs to happen before assembly tooling, fixtures, or process documentation are finalized.

Quick Answer: Which PCBA Assembly Colorado Build Strategy Is Right for Your Program?

SMT is the default for most modern Colorado PCBA programs because it supports high component density and automated assembly at scale. Through-hole remains the right choice when mechanical strength, heat dissipation, or component availability requires it. Mixed technology uses both processes in sequence and is the most common real-world configuration. The right strategy is determined by your component mix, regulatory requirements, and volume targets, not by what’s easiest to quote. 

What SMT Optimizes for Colorado PCBA Programs

Surface mount technology places components directly onto the board surface and solders them through a reflow oven process. For Colorado PCBA programs, SMT delivers: 

  • High automation compatibility, which reduces per-unit labor cost at volume
  • Dense component placement is important for boards with size, weight, or impedance constraints
  • Repeatability at scale, with statistical process control applied to paste deposition and reflow parameters
  • Broad component availability, since the majority of active and passive components ship in SMT packages 

SMT works best when the BOM is composed primarily of surface-mount components and when volumes are high enough to amortize stencil and programming costs. For prototype runs, those fixed costs represent a larger share of total build cost. For volume programs, they amortize quickly across the production run. 

Where SMT has limits: components requiring high pull-out strength, large connectors that experience mechanical stress in the field, high-power components with significant heat generation requirements, and legacy parts only available in through-hole packages. 

When Through-Hole Is Still the Right Answer

Through-hole assembly inserts component leads into drilled holes and solders them using wave soldering, selective soldering, or precision hand soldering, depending on the build. The through-board mechanical connection is stronger than surface mount, and that strength matters in specific applications.

Through-hole is the right call for: 

  • Connectors and headers are subject to repeated mating cycles or physical insertion stress
  • Power components whose package style, current demands, mechanical requirements, or thermal-management needs make through-hole a better fit
  • Transformer and inductor packages too large for surface-mount land patterns
  • Legacy industrial, military, or aerospace programs where specific through-hole components are on the approved parts list and no qualified SMT equivalent exists

In mixed-technology designs, the placement of through-hole components during layout has a direct impact on which assembly process sequences are viable. Reviewing design files before assembly begins ensures those layout decisions are documented and matched to the correct revision before the first build authorization. 

Mixed Technology: The Standard Configuration for Most Colorado PCBA Programs

Most Colorado PCBA programs use mixed technology because most real-world BOMs contain both SMT and through-hole components. The design question isn’t whether to use both. It’s how to sequence the build to minimize handling, reduce the number of thermal cycles on sensitive components, and maintain solder joint integrity across all assembly steps.

Common mixed-technology sequences:

SMT top-side, wave solder through-hole leads: Reflow top-side SMT components, insert through-hole components, then wave solder the through-hole leads from the solder side. Works when bottom-side SMT components are absent, or when compatible components are properly secured and protected for wave solder exposure.

SMT both sides, selective solder for through-hole: Reflow top and bottom SMT, then apply selective solder to through-hole locations. Preferred when bottom-side SMT density is high or components are sensitive to wave solder temperatures and flux exposure.

SMT top-side, hand-solder through-hole: Acceptable for low-volume or prototype builds where setup cost for wave or selective solder isn’t justified. Not viable for volume production because hand soldering introduces process variability that’s difficult to control at scale.

The build sequence that’s right for your program depends on your BOM, your board layout, and your volume. Build strategy also intersects with electronics supply chain resilience: a mixed-technology approach that relies on sole-source through-hole components can introduce sourcing vulnerabilities that a BOM review should identify before pilot. An EMS partner reviewing your design during DFM should flag both sequence constraints and component risk before layout is finalized. Teams that understand selecting the right board assembly process early in the design cycle avoid the sequence conflicts that typically surface at pilot.

What Most PCBA Guides Miss: Cumulative Thermal Exposure Across Multiple Process Steps

A consistently underemphasized detail in SMT versus through-hole comparisons is cumulative thermal exposure. In a double-sided SMT or mixed-technology build, components placed during the first-side reflow may be exposed to a second reflow cycle when the opposite side is processed. For temperature-sensitive components, including certain electrolytic capacitors, MEMS devices, and some connector types, that accumulated thermal exposure can affect long-term reliability in ways that a single-pass reflow wouldn’t.

Ask your assembly partner to map the thermal history for any component flagged as temperature-sensitive during DFM review. That review should happen during the design phase, not after the first pilot build fails inspection. Catching a thermal exposure conflict during design usually creates far less schedule risk than discovering it during pilot production. Catching it at pilot adds weeks. 

Final Thoughts on Choosing the Right Build Strategy

The right build strategy for a Colorado PCBA program is a function of your design, your component mix, and your volume targets. SMT, through-hole, and mixed technology each have specific and legitimate applications. The mistake is defaulting to one approach without evaluating your BOM against the requirements of each.

Vergent Products supports SMT, through-hole, and mixed-technology assembly from our Colorado facility. Our engineering team reviews the build strategy during DFM so that process decisions are made before they become production constraints. If your next design cycle is approaching layout freeze, partnering with an EMS partner for PCBA early in the design cycle prevents the sequence and sourcing conflicts that appear at pilot. Contact us to schedule a DFM review before the first board is fabricated.

Frequently Asked Questions:

What is the best PCBA assembly strategy for a Colorado program?
The best PCBA assembly strategy depends on the board design, component mix, regulatory requirements, and volume targets. SMT is often the default for high-density automated builds, through-hole is better for components that need added mechanical strength, and mixed technology is common when the BOM includes both surface-mount and through-hole components.
When should an OEM choose SMT assembly?
An OEM should choose SMT assembly when the design uses mostly surface-mount components, requires dense component placement, and will be produced at volumes that justify stencil, programming, and setup costs. SMT is especially effective for programs where automation, repeatability, and per-unit cost control matter at scale.
When is through-hole assembly still the better option?
Through-hole assembly is still the better option when components need stronger mechanical support, handle repeated insertion stress, require specific package styles, or remain on an approved parts list for legacy industrial, military, or aerospace programs. It is commonly used for connectors, headers, transformers, inductors, and certain power components.
Why do most real-world PCBA builds use mixed technology?
Most real-world PCBA builds use mixed technology because many BOMs include both SMT and through-hole components. The key decision is not simply whether to use both processes, but how to sequence SMT, wave solder, selective solder, or hand soldering to reduce handling, protect sensitive components, and maintain solder joint quality.
Why should build strategy be reviewed before layout is finalized?
Build strategy should be reviewed before layout is finalized because component placement affects assembly sequencing, soldering options, thermal exposure, and sourcing risk. A DFM review before fabrication helps identify layout conflicts, temperature-sensitive components, and sole-source parts before they create delays during pilot production.

About the Author

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Alex Wells

Alex Wells is a very passionate business executive - the CEO & Co-Founder of Imprint Digital, headquartered at the Forge Campus in Loveland, CO. Boasting more than 13 years in his successful professional career, Alex is competent in the areas of core business—digital marketing, strategic planning, sales, account management, operations, employee and development management, training, communications, and, of course, customer service.