On Thu, Nov 08, 2001 at 10:02:15AM -0600, jima wrote:

>  I had the same response once when someone told me the motherboard he
> bought was blue (as opposed to green).  He didn't get my line of
> questioning.  "WHAT IS THE TECHNICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF THE COLOR
> BLUE!?!?"  Seems like a pretty simple question to me. :)

There may be a little significance, but the color is just a by-product
if that is the case.

Many cheap (consumer electronics) PCB's are green, because they use a
cheaper board, and only one sided thru-holes.  Often times, blue
boards were a sign of a better board (I forget the material) with a
better (epoxy?) finish and dual sided / plated thru holes.  [1] Also,
I recall seeing blue typically on multilayer PCBs, i.e., 3 or 4
circuit layers sandwiched together, and in a really heavy RF
application (like a GHz processor) might even have an internal ground
plane.  I don't recall seeing green for "real" PCBs.

[1] Thru-holes are the holes in which the component leads go (though
many things are surface mount these days.)  A one-sided thru hole only
has a pad on one side of the board, while a plated thru-hole has
contact metal plated on the inside of the hole.  When the solder joint
is made, it's much more robust, and a cracked solder pad on one side
of the board won't cause bad connections as easily.

-- 
I used to like HP before computers, and once I even liked Compaq,
but I liked DEC better than HP and Compaq put together.