Most PCB issues don’t start with your schematic, they start after it.

You followed the datasheet, double-checked the footprints, and kept your traces clean. But the moment your board hits production, there’s noise on the lines, your timing margins collapse, or worse: the board doesn’t pass compliance.

This is what Signal and Power Integrity (SI/PI) is all about, and why it’s critical even for everyday designs.

What’s Actually Going Wrong?

Signal integrity issues fall into three buckets:

  1. Reflections – When impedance is mismatched at connectors, vias, or stubs, energy reflects back toward the source. This causes overshoot, ringing, or timing errors.
  2. Insertion loss – High-frequency signals degrade as they move through lossy materials or poorly routed traces. Eye diagrams close up, jitter increases, and edge rates slow down.
  3. Crosstalk – Aggressor nets couple into nearby “victim” nets, injecting noise via mutual capacitance and inductance. This reduces your signal-to-noise ratio and corrupts data.

If you’re using fast clocks, long runs, or high-speed I/O—even on a two-layer board—these issues can bite.

What Is Crosstalk (And How to Spot It)?

Crosstalk happens when traces run too close in parallel. The energy from one net bleeds into the other, distorting waveforms and injecting unpredictable noise.

You’ll see false triggers or glitches in digital nets, unexpected ripple in analog sections and most of the times -- EMI issues in test.

Want a shortcut? If your trace spacing is less than 3× the width, and they run in parallel for more than a few centimeters, you probably have crosstalk.

5 Ways to Reduce Crosstalk Today

You don’t need a PhD or 8-layer board to fix this. Try these:

  • Increase spacing — Keep parallel nets ≥3× trace width
  • Use guard traces — Add grounded traces between high-speed lines
  • Stick to stripline — Route sensitive nets between ground planes
  • Control return paths — Avoid routing across plane splits
  • Maintain symmetry — For differential pairs, match spacing and lengths

It’s Not Just About Routing

Board materials, stack-up, impedance, and even your decoupling caps play a role.

If your stack-up lacks solid return planes, or your dielectric isn’t up to spec, no amount of “good routing” will save you.

You Don’t Have to Be an Expert, But You Do Need a Plan

This is why we put together a complete guide that breaks down:

  • How to characterize your signals
  • What to ask from your PCB house
  • How to choose materials and trace geometries
  • Where to place stitching vias and capacitors
  • How to validate performance before the lab

📘 Download the full Signal Integrity PDF Guide

With checklists, diagrams, and cheat sheets to design boards that work the first time, for FREE.

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Jharwin Barrozo

Jharwin is an electronics engineer mainly focused on satellites. He built his own ground station using Flux to monitor RF activities on the International Space Station. Find him on Flux @jharwinbarrozo

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Design PCBs with AI
Introducing a new way to work: Give Flux a job and it plans, explains, and executes workflows inside a full browser-based eCAD you can edit anytime.
Screenshot of the Flux app showing a PCB in 3D mode with collaborative cursors, a comment thread pinned on the canvas, and live pricing and availability for a part on the board.

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