Too Late to Swap? How to Avoid Costly Connector Redesigns – Validate Availability Early

2025-11-24

Blog

Richmon

Imagine finalizing your design, issuing your BOM, and moving toward production—only to discover the key connector is no longer available. It’s obsolete, backordered, or discontinued entirely. There’s no compatible substitute, and your schedule is at risk.

This situation is avoidable. Connector availability is not a post-design problem—it’s a design-time responsibility. With obsolescence on the rise and lead times still unpredictable across interconnect families, it is essential to validate connector availability before locking the BOM.

This article outlines why connector sourcing remains volatile, provides current lead time and obsolescence data, and details practical validation steps that should be part of every product design workflow.

Table of Contents

Why “Too Late to Swap” Happens in Connector Sourcing

Connector sourcing risks often surface late in development because lifecycle status and logistics realities evolve faster than most engineering timelines.

A component that appears readily available during the design phase may be discontinued, non-recommended, or on allocation months later—often without a formal notification.

Connector supply continues to be impacted by several factors:

  • Discontinuation of niche or low-volume part numbers

  • Regional supply chain disruptions

  • Raw material pricing fluctuations (e.g., copper)

  • Limited vendor support for legacy interconnect series

Unlike semiconductors, many connector families do not follow structured end-of-life processes. Design teams relying only on static datasheets or outdated part libraries may inadvertently choose components already at risk.

How Fast Availability Can Change

Recent industry data illustrates that while some semiconductor categories have improved, connector availability remains vulnerable.

Component Type2023 Lead Time2024 Lead TimeTrendObsolescence Risk
Analog ICs28.4 weeks23.4 weeksDecreasingHigh (frequent PCNs and EOLs)
Connectors12–20 weeks12–20 weeksFlatModerate to High
All Components111,150 parts obsoletedIncreasingOne-third had no PCN notification

Connector lead times have remained relatively stable, but obsolescence risk is growing. In 2023, more than 111,000 components across categories went obsolete without formal notice. Connectors accounted for a significant share of that silent attrition.

Hidden Risk: Obsolescence Without Warning

A growing share of obsolescence events are not formally communicated. This risk is especially relevant in the connector category where low-volume or specialized parts may quietly be dropped from production without a product change notification (PCN).

When a connector goes obsolete without prior notice:

  • No Last Time Buy (LTB) date is provided

  • Alternative options may not exist

  • Production is delayed while the team revalidates a replacement

  • PCB layout, enclosure, and mechanical assemblies may require updates

Effective obsolescence risk management now assumes that PCNs alone are insufficient. Design teams must adopt proactive strategies including lifecycle analytics and BOM-level alerting.

How to Validate Connector Availability at Design Time

Connector validation must begin in the design phase—not during procurement. When a connector is frozen into the design without confirming availability, the risk of late-stage disruption increases significantly.

Key validation steps include:

  • Checking live distributor inventory for each connector

  • Reviewing the average and worst-case lead time range

  • Verifying lifecycle status (Active, NRND, or Obsolete)

  • Reviewing the part’s PCN and EOL history

  • Determining if a second source or pin-compatible option is available

Modern CAD and PLM platforms allow integration of this data directly into part libraries. Tools like Altium Designer, Cadence Allegro, and Zuken CR-8000 support component-level data feeds for real-time validation.

Connector Availability Checklist for Design Reviews

To avoid locking in parts with hidden risks, a standard checklist should be applied during schematic and layout review:

  • Lifecycle Status: Active, Not Recommended for New Designs, or Obsolete

  • PCN/EOL History: Frequency and type of past change notifications

  • Lead Time Range: Median vs. worst-case delivery time

  • Multi-Distributor Inventory: Availability across trusted suppliers

  • Second Source Options: Footprint-compatible alternates identified

  • Environmental/Regulatory Constraints: RoHS, REACH, temperature ratings

This checklist can be maintained in spreadsheet form or integrated into the team’s project management platform.

Design-In Strategy: Plan for Second Sources from Day One

Designing flexibility into the BOM is a practical way to mitigate connector-related disruptions. Selecting connector families that offer second-source options gives teams agility when availability changes.

Recommended actions:

  • Identify connector families with multiple suppliers or cross-reference compatibility

  • Evaluate alternates for mechanical, electrical, and regulatory equivalence

  • Confirm supply chain access for both primary and secondary sources

  • Clearly mark primary and alternate parts in the BOM or ERP system

How PCNs, EOL Notices, and BOM Alerts Work Together

Understanding how notifications and alerts are triggered is key to connector lifecycle management.

  • PCNs (Product Change Notifications) inform design teams about non-functional changes like packaging, materials, or test locations.

  • EOL Notices define last order dates and final shipment timelines.

  • BOM Alerts consolidate all status changes tied to components actively used in current designs.

The most efficient way to manage this process is through automated alert subscriptions. Obsolescence platforms like SiliconExpert and IHS Markit Parts Intelligence offer BOM monitoring tools that sync with internal part numbers and CAD libraries.

These services can notify engineering and procurement teams as soon as a risk appears, allowing time to plan transitions, place last-time buys, or begin alternate validation.

Secure Designs from the Start

Connector availability is not a procurement issue—it’s a design decision. When a key part becomes unavailable after layout or qualification, the cost to redesign can be significant. Timelines slip. Costs rise. Products miss launch targets.

The solution is simple but critical: validate connector availability at the beginning of your development cycle.

That means checking lifecycle status, monitoring for obsolescence, verifying second-source options, and ensuring consistent stock from suppliers.

For technical teams that want to stay ahead of supply chain disruptions, this process must become standard operating procedure.

For expert assistance in screening your BOM, selecting lifecycle-stable connectors, and securing sourcing support from day one, get in touch with our team.

Need help validating connector availability for your next project?

Contact Richmon Industrial now for engineering guidance, sample support, and connector sourcing you can trust.

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