EMC Hooks & Layout for CAN/LIN/FlexRay Fieldbuses
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EMC stability comes from controlling three levers together: edge behavior (slew/drive), return/reference paths (ground/chassis/harness), and operating modes (standby/wake policy). This page turns symptoms into a repeatable workflow—pick the dominant factor first, change one knob, and verify with a locked measurement recipe.
Definition & Scope: What “EMC Hooks & Layout” Covers
This page focuses on controllable edges and controllable return paths: use programmable device hooks and disciplined harness/ground/layout planning to reduce emissions and improve immunity without drifting into component-selection pages.
30-second alignment
- Problem solved: emissions/immunity issues dominated by edge energy, common-mode paths, and mode transitions.
- Method: apply a single diagnostic lens: Edge × Return × Mode.
- Outputs: a reusable scope guard, a mental model for root-cause, and a clean handoff to sibling pages when needed.
Working definitions (engineering-grade)
- Hooks: device-side programmable knobs (e.g., slew, drive strength, edge shaping, mode gating) that change high-frequency energy, common-mode excitation, and transition transients.
- Layout: physical design choices that control the return path and the reference (planes, stitching, partition boundaries, connector zone), and manage coupling between harness, chassis reference, and the PCB.
Unified model: Edge × Return × Mode (turn it into questions)
- Edge: can HF energy be reduced by tuning slew/drive without collapsing timing/noise margin?
- Return: is the return path short, closed, and reference-stable, or forced into a large loop (plane split / cross-zone / chassis detour)?
- Mode: do standby/wake transitions create bursty excitations (gating jitter, periodic wake, windowing artifacts) that drive EMI or false events?
Scope guard (prevents content overlap)
This page owns (deep coverage)
- Programmable slew/drive/mode hooks and their EMC consequences.
- Return-path, reference, partitioning, stitching strategies (PCB level).
- Harness + chassis reference planning and star-ground decisions (EMC view).
Mention only (one line + link)
- CMC & split termination (component network details live elsewhere) — see sibling page.
- Port ESD/Surge arrays (TVS selection & IEC models live elsewhere) — see sibling page.
Excludes (do not expand here)
- Selective wake / partial networking mechanisms — see sibling page.
- Protocol timing deep-dives (CAN FD / CAN XL windows, etc.) — CAN FD | CAN XL.
- Isolation/CMTI deep-dives — see sibling page.
Diagram: Scope map / ownership matrix
EMI/Immunity Mechanisms for Fieldbuses — in One Mental Model
Reduce complexity by following a single causal chain: edge energy excites common-mode paths through parasitics and return discontinuities, then the harness/chassis loop converts it into radiation and susceptibility.
Minimal model: differential vs common-mode (enough to make decisions)
- Differential (DM): the intended signal between the two bus wires; strong signal quality does not guarantee low radiation.
- Common-mode (CM): both wires move together vs the reference (PCB ground / chassis); CM is the dominant actor for emissions and many immunity failures.
Emission: the four practical “gain points”
- CM current: harness and reference paths convert edge energy into radiating loop current; results swing strongly with grounding and harness routing.
- Open/long return loop: return discontinuities (plane splits, cross-zone routing, weak chassis bonds) enlarge the loop area and raise radiation efficiency.
- Fast edges: high dv/dt and di/dt inject broadband energy; slew/drive knobs often produce immediate spectral changes.
- Ground bounce (shared impedance): shared return impedance couples noise into references; mode transitions and mixed-domain boards amplify the effect.
Immunity: three repeatable failure mechanisms
- Threshold-crossing uncertainty: slow edges plus injected noise create timing ambiguity; “slower for EMI” can reduce noise margin if pushed too far.
- CM injection into reference: CM shifts local reference and receiver decision levels, turning external fields and harness noise into apparent data activity.
- Mode-transition transients: standby/wake gating and periodic activity create burst excitations and measurement/logic window artifacts that look like random EMC failures.
Quick attribution (first check before tuning)
- EMI changes immediately after slew/drive tuning: Edge-dominant → prioritize hooks, then verify margin.
- Results swing with harness routing or chassis bonds: Return/Harness-dominant → prioritize return closure and reference stability.
- Failures cluster around standby/wake transitions: Mode-dominant → prioritize gating/transient control and measurement alignment.
Diagram: Edge → common-mode path → radiation/susceptibility
Programmable Slew Rate: When to Slow Down (and When Not To)
Slew tuning is an edge-energy knob: it reshapes high-frequency content and common-mode excitation, but can also reduce threshold-crossing robustness if pushed too slow.
Decision snapshot (before changing any setting)
- Edge-dominant emission: near-field/radiation changes immediately with slew → reduce slew first, then validate margin.
- Return/harness-dominant emission: results swing with grounding/harness routing → slew is secondary; prioritize return closure and reference stability.
- Immunity-sensitive system: failures cluster under injected noise/fields → avoid driving slew too slow; preserve threshold-crossing robustness.
What slew rate changes (mechanisms that matter for EMC)
- Less high-frequency energy: slower edges reduce broadband spectral content that feeds radiation through harness loops.
- Lower common-mode excitation: smaller dv/dt and di/dt reduce the peak drive into parasitics and shared-impedance paths that create CM current.
Trade-offs (what breaks first when edges get too slow)
- Threshold-crossing uncertainty increases: slow edges spend longer near the receiver threshold; injected noise can shift the crossing moment and raise jitter/false decisions.
- Immunity can get worse in some scenes: under strong CM injection, a slower transition can be easier to perturb than a clean, faster crossing.
- Margin becomes temperature- and harness-dependent: the “safe” slew window can shrink with real harness dispersion and reference instability.
Tuning recipe (objective-first, minimal-risk)
- Define targets: emission focus band(s), immunity requirement level, and link-error limit (placeholders: X dB, Y, Z/Window).
- Change one knob only: adjust slew without changing drive or mode settings.
- Step by one grade: avoid big jumps; log emission delta and error counters per step.
- Verify across scenes: test at temperature corners and representative harness routing/ground bonds.
- Lock a window: select the fastest slew that meets emission targets while keeping stable margins in worst-case immunity scenes.
Stop rules (when to revert or change focus)
- If errors climb or immunity becomes unstable after slowing edges, revert one step and re-check return/reference paths (often the true dominant factor).
- If emission improves only slightly while margin degrades quickly, stop tuning slew and prioritize return closure and harness/chassis reference.
Diagram: Slew vs emission risk vs timing margin risk (trend only)
Drive Strength & Edge Symmetry: When “Stronger” Gets Worse
Drive strength is an energy-injection knob: higher instantaneous current can amplify overshoot, ringing, and common-mode excitation. Robust EMC often prefers the minimum drive that preserves signal margin.
What drive strength changes (the engineering view)
- di/dt and injected energy: stronger drive raises instantaneous current and the energy feeding parasitics and harness resonances.
- reference disturbance: shared-impedance and return discontinuities convert injected energy into ground bounce and CM current.
Typical failure signatures (strong drive makes them louder)
- Overshoot/undershoot: parasitic inductance and reflections create excursions beyond the steady level; stronger drive increases the excursion energy.
- Ringing: resonant behavior persists longer when more energy is injected; harness and return discontinuities can turn small ringing into radiated peaks.
- Higher CM excitation: imbalance and shared impedance transform “more drive” into “more CM current,” raising both emission and susceptibility risk.
Edge symmetry (dominant/recessive balance) — why it matters
- Asymmetric edges create repeatable spectral artifacts and can increase sensitivity to harness and reference variation.
- When symmetry controls exist, tune toward balanced rise/fall behavior before applying aggressive drive.
First knob to try (no topology detours)
- Overshoot dominates: reduce drive first to lower injected energy, then re-check waveform stability.
- Ringing dominates: reduce drive (first) and adjust slew (second) to limit energy feeding resonance.
- Slow-edge noise crossing: avoid slowing further; restore a faster crossing and investigate reference/return stability.
- Asymmetry dominates: tune for edge balance (symmetry/drive balance) before adding more drive.
Diagram: Waveform symptom cards → first knob to try
Standby Current vs Emission: Low-Power Modes, Wake Paths, and “Silent” EMI
Low standby current does not automatically mean low emission. Sleep/standby modes can introduce new excitation sources (DC/DC pulses, periodic housekeeping, clock gating edges, and wake transients) that couple into common-mode paths.
Key idea
- Standby optimizations often reshape activity into short pulses and periodic bursts, creating “silent” EMI peaks even while average current is low.
- Acceptance should treat standby current, silent-EMI peaks, false wake rate, and wake reliability as one combined engineering budget.
“Silent” EMI sources in standby/sleep (what typically excites the harness)
- Internal DC/DC light-load behavior: skip/pulse patterns form comb-like spectra that couple through supply/ground impedance.
- Periodic housekeeping / timed wake: fixed intervals produce repeatable peaks; emissions can be “quiet most of the time” but fail on narrow bands.
- Sampling windows & sense circuits: window edges and reference shifts can appear as common-mode perturbations.
- Clock/power gating jitter: unstable gating boundaries spread spectral energy and increase susceptibility under injected noise.
Hook classes that can reduce Iq but raise EMC risk (handle as trade-offs)
- Clock/power hooks: deeper gating and aggressive DC/DC light-load modes can lower Iq but create bursty excitation.
- Wake-path hooks: sensitive thresholds and shorter debounce windows reduce “awake time” but increase false wake risk.
- Edge hooks during wake: fast wake edges can spike CM current; overly slow wake edges can reduce robustness in noise-heavy scenes.
Combined acceptance metrics (power + EMC + reliability as one budget)
| State | Power | Likely trigger | Risk | Pass criteria (placeholders) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standby | Iq ≤ X | DC/DC pulses, periodic wake | silent peaks ↑ |
Silent EMI peak margin ≥ M dB (band B); False wake ≤ Y / day |
| Sleep | Iq ≤ X′ | sense windows, leakage coupling | false wake ↑ |
Wake-source attribution logged; False wake ≤ Y′ / day |
| Wake | peak / inrush ≤ X″ | clock start, bus burst | CM spike ↑ |
Wake success ≥ Z% (N trials); Wake transient peak below limit (band B) |
| Normal | nominal | edge activity, load steps | broadband ↑ |
Emission margin ≥ M dB (band B); Error rate within limit (window W) |
Note: keep placeholders (X/Y/Z/M/B/W) consistent across the project, so logs and lab reports align with design decisions.
Tuning recipe (avoid “save power → EMI explodes”)
- Define per-state targets: Iq, wake latency, false wake rate, and silent-EMI margin (placeholders).
- Identify the dominant trigger: DC/DC pulses vs periodic tasks vs gating boundaries vs wake transient.
- Change one class of hook at a time: clock/power hooks first, wake filters second, edge hooks only when needed.
- Log attribution: wake source, event counters, timestamps, and duty patterns (so “silent EMI” can be correlated).
- Verify in representative harness/chassis scenes: bench wiring can hide dominant CM paths that appear in the vehicle harness.
Stop rules (when to revert)
- If Iq decreases but false wake rises, revert and widen debounce/filters or stabilize gating boundaries before further power cuts.
- If “comb-like” peaks appear in standby, stop and audit periodic tasks and DC/DC light-load mode behavior before touching bus edge settings.
Diagram: Power-state machine with EMI triggers and hooks
Harness Planning: Return Path, Chassis Reference, and Stub Discipline (EMC View)
In real vehicles, the harness often becomes the dominant radiator when common-mode paths are long or reference is unstable. Planning is about closing the return, stabilizing the reference, and minimizing stubs so the harness does not behave like an antenna.
The three essentials (EMC view only)
- Return closure: keep the effective loop small; avoid routing that forces return to detour through chassis or across partition gaps.
- Reference consistency: define where harness reference ties to chassis/body/power ground so CM current has a short, predictable path.
- Stub discipline: long branches increase antenna efficiency and sensitivity; treat stubs as an EMC risk multiplier.
Typical mistakes (signal looks fine, but the return is wrong)
- Cross-zone return detour: the signal pair crosses a boundary while return reference jumps domains → CM path length expands.
- Uncontrolled chassis bonds: changing bond points or harness routing changes EMI drastically → reference is not stable or not short.
- Stub growth during integration: late-added branches for service or options increase sensitivity and create new peaks even if bus timing remains acceptable.
Chassis/body/power ground: decision guidance (no component detours)
- Stronger bonding helps when the priority is shortening high-frequency CM loops and stabilizing the harness reference near connectors.
- Controlled/single-point bonding helps when low-frequency ground loops or high power return currents would pollute sensitive references.
- The goal is not “more ties,” but short, predictable CM return aligned with mechanical structure and harness routing.
Practical planning checklist (fast to audit)
- Connector zone: keep reference continuous; avoid return discontinuities right at the port.
- Partition boundaries: do not let signals cross a gap without a nearby, intentional return path.
- Harness routing: avoid long parallel runs next to high dv/dt power bundles when possible.
- Stub control: minimize branches; avoid late T-splits that create new resonant behavior.
- Bond points: define primary/secondary reference ties and document their EMC purpose (HF loop vs service).
Stop rules (when not to keep tuning hooks)
- If EMI changes drastically with harness posture or bonding location, treat the issue as return/reference-dominant; hook tuning will not be stable.
- If long stubs are present, reduce stub exposure before expecting consistent improvements from slew/drive adjustments.
Diagram: Harness as antenna vs controlled return (contrast)
Star-Ground Planning: ECU Offsets, Chassis Bonds, and Surge Return Strategy
Star-ground planning turns “ground” into a controlled return network: it limits shared impedance, stabilizes the reference seen by the transceiver, and prevents high-energy surge/ESD currents from borrowing sensitive paths.
Key idea
- A “star” is not a slogan. It is a plan that separates high-energy returns from sensitive references and minimizes shared impedance.
- The objective is short, predictable common-mode return with no large loops through chassis + harness + ECU grounds.
Planning targets (write as budgets, not opinions)
- Shared-impedance drop: limit ground reference shift from load/surge currents (ΔVgnd ≤ X).
- CM return predictability: define where the harness reference ties to chassis/body ground so CM currents take a short path.
- No large loops: block unintended chassis–harness–ECU loop areas that raise radiation efficiency.
When ECU ground offset / return dominates (symptom → interpretation)
- Bench OK, vehicle fails: changing bond points or harness routing changes results a lot → reference is unstable or CM path length is changing.
- Pass once, later becomes “fragile”: high-energy return likely crossed sensitive reference regions during ESD/surge events.
- Fails during load transients: power return and communication reference share impedance → ground shift injects CM and reduces margin.
Chassis bonds: decision guidance (no component detours)
- More bonding helps when the priority is shortening high-frequency return and stabilizing harness reference near connectors.
- Controlled bonding helps when low-frequency ground loops or high power-return currents would pollute sensitive reference planes.
- The goal is not “more ties,” but short, intentional CM return aligned with mechanical structure and harness routing.
Surge/ESD return strategy (return + layout constraints only)
- Priority 1: low-impedance loop. keep the high-energy return short, wide, and referenced to chassis/body ground at the planned bond.
- Priority 2: avoid sensitive zones. mark PHY/clock/logic reference regions as “no-through” for high-energy return paths.
- Priority 3: exit early. route energy to chassis/body reference near the entry, so it does not travel across the PCB.
Boundary: this section focuses on return topology and placement constraints; component selection belongs to the dedicated protection pages.
Planning checklist (fast to audit)
- Define the star point: where sensitive reference “anchors” for the PHY live.
- Define chassis bond points: primary/secondary ties with clear EMC purpose.
- Mark a no-loop zone: prevent chassis–harness–ECU loops with large area.
- Mark a high-energy return lane: surge/ESD current must not cross sensitive planes.
- Stop rule: if changing bond points flips EMI outcomes, treat return/reference as dominant before tuning hooks.
Diagram: Star-ground topology map (nodes, bonds, return lane, no-loop zone)
PCB Layout Rules: Placement Zones, Partitioning, Stitching Vias, and Reference Planes
Layout rules become reliable when each rule states the coupling path it prevents. Focus is on relative placement, zoning, reference continuity, and via stitching—without component value detours.
Key idea
- The goal is not “pretty traces,” but continuous reference, short return loops, and controlled partition boundaries.
- Misplacement creates parasitic paths that amplify common-mode excitation and spread noise across planes.
Interface triangle: Transceiver ↔ Connector ↔ Protection (placement constraint)
- Keep the triangle compact so the return loop closes locally and does not travel across the PCB.
- Place the protection function in the entry zone so high-energy return exits early, not through sensitive reference planes.
- If the transceiver is far from the connector, the harness-facing segment length increases and radiation efficiency rises.
Partitioning: PHY / Logic / Power / Chassis boundary (responsibilities)
- PHY zone: keep reference continuous; do not allow high-energy returns to cross the local plane.
- Logic zone: isolate from harness-coupled CM activity; avoid plane contamination via boundary leakage.
- Power zone: confine high di/dt loops to their corridor so they do not share impedance with PHY reference.
- Chassis edge: define bonding and stitching so reference is stable near ports.
Stitching vias & fences: when they are mandatory
- Add stitching near connector edges and reference transitions to pin the return path and reduce CM spread.
- Use via fences along partition boundaries where coupling risk is high (an “EM field fence”).
- Avoid gaps that force return to detour; “return across a split” is a common root cause for harness-facing emission spikes.
Reference planes: continuity rules (audit-oriented)
- Do not route edge-sensitive paths over reference splits; the return will jump domains and excite CM current.
- During layer changes, ensure a nearby return path anchor so the loop does not expand.
- Treat plane cuts and boundary crossings as explicit EMC decisions, not incidental CAD outcomes.
“Parasitics as rules” (placement mistake → parasitic path)
- Protection placed too deep inside: high-energy return crosses PHY reference → CM injection increases.
- Transceiver too far from connector: harness-facing segment grows → return loop grows → radiation efficiency rises.
- No fence on the boundary: noise spreads on the reference plane → logic zone becomes a victim path.
Quick checks (placeholders for pass criteria)
- Triangle compact? Return closes locally? (loop area ≤ X)
- Reference continuous under harness-facing paths? (no split crossings)
- Boundary fenced and stitched? (via fence density ≥ X, near connector)
Diagram: Placement zoning heatmap (keep-in, via fence, reference boundaries)
H2-9. EMC Hooks Tuning Workflow: From Symptom → Hypothesis → Knob → Pass Criteria
Tuning becomes reliable only when it follows a reusable loop: classify the symptom → identify the dominant factor → change one knob → verify against a locked recipe. If results are strongly posture/bond-sensitive, stop fine tuning and fix return/reference first.
- First knob: slew rate (slower edge reduces high-frequency excitation)
- Second knob: drive strength (avoid over-driving that excites harness resonances)
- State knob: per-state edge policy (Normal vs Standby vs Wake)
- First knob: align state transition timing with measurement and logging windows
- Second knob: gating policy (reduce “silent” switching in standby)
- Verification focus: wake reliability and false-wake rate under the same recipe
- Minimal change A: shorten and localize the high-energy return lane (avoid shared impedance with logic reference)
- Minimal change B: add stitching/via-fence to “pin” the return to the intended reference near the connector zone
- Minimal change C: enforce the interface triangle keep-in zone (transceiver–connector–protection) to reduce loop area
- Emission: margin ≥ X dB under the locked recipe (bandwidth, posture, load)
- Immunity: pass at Y V/m (or defined injection level) in the specified state
- Wake: false wake rate ≤ Z per time window; missed wake = 0 under defined conditions
- Error-rate: application error counters stable within X over Y minutes
Setup ID:
Config ID (before):
Symptom class (Emission / Immunity / Wake):
Dominant factor (Edge / Return / Mode):
One change (slew OR drive OR gating OR minimal layout action):
Reason (hypothesis):
Result summary:
Verify metric (X dB / Y V/m / Z false wake / counters):
Rollback point (if needed):
Notes (posture/bond/recipe locked?):
H2-10. Validation & Measurement: What to Measure, Where to Probe, and How to Avoid False Conclusions
Validation is a three-layer evidence chain: node waveform (local edge behavior), common-mode current (radiation-driving mechanism), and harness radiation proxy (system-level risk indicator). Conclusions require a locked measurement recipe and aligned state windows.
- Near transceiver pins: exposes edge behavior and local ringing drivers
- Near connector zone: better represents what is injected into the harness (common-mode excitation)
- Across reference boundaries: reveals return discontinuities and seam-crossing risks
- During state transitions: reveals gating-induced transients and window misalignment
- Emission margin: ≥ X dB (condition fields mandatory: bandwidth, posture, load, distance/probe)
- Immunity: pass at Y V/m (condition fields mandatory: state, load, injection method)
- Wake: false wake rate ≤ Z (condition fields mandatory: time window, environment, filter policy)
Recipe ID:
State window (Normal / Standby / Wake, start/end):
Harness posture (photo / note):
Chassis bonds (note):
Probe type and location (coordinates):
Bandwidth / averaging / RBW-VBW:
Load condition:
Metrics to record (node / CM current / proxy):
Screenshots/logs stored at:
H2-11. Engineering Checklist: Design → Bring-up → Production (EMC-first)
This section turns all “hooks & layout” guidance into three gates with auditable evidence: each check requires (1) a concrete action, (2) a stored artifact, and (3) pass criteria. Part numbers below are reference BOM lines for lab correlation & documentation, not a selection guide.
Gate A · Design (lock return/reference first, then hooks)
Pass: Every shipped mode has an explicit default and rollback target (X = project rule).
Reference parts (for documentation): TCAN1042H-Q1, TLE9255W, MCP2562FD, TJA1462, TJA1463, TLIN1029-Q1, TJA1021, TJA1081G.
Pass: Return loop is compact and does not cross partition seams (loop area ≤ X).
Reference parts: PESD2CANFD24V-QC (CAN ESD/TVS), ACT45B-510-2P-TL003 (CAN CMC).
Pass: No high-edge path crosses a plane gap; stitching plan exists at boundaries (X density).
Pass: Bus/return do not traverse seams; chassis bonds are planned (single vs multi-point) with justification.
Pass: Fence spans the connector zone and closes the return path to the chosen reference.
Pass: High-energy return does not share impedance with logic reference (X rule).
Reference parts: PESD2CANFD24V-QC (CAN), PESD2CAN (legacy CAN, NRND—use only for legacy correlation).
Pass: Harness posture sensitivity risk is identified and mitigation is planned (X test).
Pass: Any EMI/immunity failure can be reproduced with the same config ID and test setup.
Pass: Every threshold X is tied to a measurement recipe (no floating numbers).
Pass: If posture/bond changes swing results beyond X, stop hook tuning and fix return/reference first.
Gate B · Bring-up (find dominant path before fine tuning)
Pass: Baseline is reproducible across N runs (variation ≤ X).
Pass: Dominant axis selected before any multi-knob tuning begins.
Pass: Correlation stays monotonic; if not, stop and re-check return/reference.
Pass: Standby EMI and wake reliability are both within X thresholds under the same recipe.
Pass: Symptom improves with layout/return changes, not just with stronger protection.
Reference parts: PESD2CANFD24V-QC, ACT45B-510-2P-TL003, DLW21SN900SQ2L.
Pass: If sensitivity > X, return/reference remediation is mandatory before parameter optimization.
Pass: Passing window survives harness tolerance and temperature (X coverage).
Pass: Another station can reproduce the same “pass” using only the artifact package.
Gate C · Production (freeze + correlate + regress)
Pass: Any change requires re-running the regression suite (X policy).
Pass: Station-to-station delta stays within X under the locked recipe.
Pass: No comparison is accepted without the same recipe fields filled.
Pass: All items meet thresholds X under locked conditions.
Pass: Substitutions require re-correlation (X rule).
Reference BOM lines: PESD2CANFD24V-QC, ACT45B-510-2P-TL003, DLW21SN900SQ2L.
Pass: Any unit can be audited and reproduced in a different station using only the package.
Config ID:
Bus type (CAN / LIN / FlexRay):
State (Normal / Standby / Sleep / Wake):
Slew setting:
Drive setting:
Wake policy (source / filter / debounce):
Notes (why this default):
Reference parts (optional): TCAN1042H-Q1 / TLE9255W / MCP2562FD / TJA1462 / TJA1463 / TLIN1029-Q1 / TJA1021 / TJA1081G
Setup ID:
Harness version:
Fixture version:
Posture / bonds note:
Instrument recipe ID:
Change (only 1 knob):
Result summary:
Dominant-path note (Return / Hook / Harness):
Rollback point:
Metric group: Emission / Immunity / Silent EMI / False wake / Error rate
Condition (bandwidth, load, posture, temp):
Threshold X:
Evidence required (plot/log/photo):
Owner:
Regression frequency:
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H2-12. FAQs (10–12) — Troubleshooting Closure (Hooks + Layout + Harness + Ground)
Format rule per question: Likely cause / Quick check / Fix / Pass criteria. Use placeholders (X/Y/Z/N/T) and keep the measurement recipe locked for comparisons.