Last season, we received a troubling call from a US distributor. Their fleet of agricultural drones failed mid-spray after just three months of operation. The culprit? Corroded PCBs with no conformal coating 1. This problem costs operators thousands in downtime and repairs.
When sourcing agricultural drones, request conformal coating by specifying the coating type (parylene, acrylic, or silicone), thickness requirements, compliance standards (IPC-CC-830C or MIL-I-46058C), and testing protocols in your RFQ documents. Verify your supplier’s coating capabilities through sample testing and facility audits before placing production orders.
This guide walks you through every step of requesting proper PCB protection for your agricultural drone fleet. Let’s explore why coatings matter and how to specify them correctly.
Why is conformal coating essential for protecting my agricultural drone PCBs from moisture and chemicals?
Our production team once disassembled a competitor's drone returned from a coastal farm. The uncoated PCB showed green corrosion spots everywhere. Salt spray and pesticide residue had destroyed the electronics in weeks. This happens far too often in agricultural applications.
Conformal coating is essential because agricultural drones operate in harsh environments with constant exposure to moisture, humidity, pesticides, fertilizers, and temperature swings. Without protective coating, PCBs suffer corrosion, dendritic growth, and electrical shorts—leading to mid-flight failures and costly repairs.

Understanding the Agricultural Environment Challenge
Agricultural drones face conditions that destroy unprotected electronics. Early morning operations mean exposure to dew and fog. Spray applications put drones directly in contact with fertilizers and pesticides. These chemicals attack copper traces and solder joints.
Our engineers have documented three main failure modes in uncoated agricultural drone PCBs:
| Failure Mode | Cause | Time to Failure |
|---|---|---|
| Corrosion | Moisture + salt/chemicals | 2-6 months |
| Dendritic Growth 2 | Humidity + voltage bias | 3-12 months |
| Electromigration | Chemical contamination + current | 6-18 months |
How Chemicals Attack Drone Electronics
Pesticides contain active ingredients that corrode metal surfaces. Fertilizer residue attracts moisture and creates conductive paths. When we test returned drone boards, we often find white crystalline deposits—signs of chemical attack.
The coastal farm environment adds salt spray to this mix. Salt is highly corrosive. It accelerates every failure mode. Drones operating near oceans or in areas with hard water face double the corrosion risk.
The Cost of Unprotected PCBs
Replacing a flight controller costs $200-500 in parts alone. Add labor and downtime, and each failure costs $800-1500. For fleet operators, these costs multiply quickly. A 10-drone fleet with coating failures could face $15,000 in annual repair costs.
Conformal coating adds $5-15 per board at production volume. This small investment prevents major losses. Our warranty data shows coated boards have 85% fewer field failures than uncoated ones.
Protection Mechanisms
Conformal coatings work by creating a barrier between the PCB and its environment. They prevent moisture from reaching copper traces. They block chemical contamination. They stop dendritic whiskers from bridging traces.
Modern coatings also provide UV resistance. Agricultural drones operate under direct sunlight for hours. UV radiation degrades many plastics and unprotected PCB materials. Proper coating adds years to board life.
How do I specify the right type of PCB coating when negotiating with my drone supplier?
When our US customers send RFQs, we notice most don't specify coating requirements at all. They assume we'll handle it. But coating type, thickness, and application method dramatically affect protection level and cost. Vague specifications lead to mismatched expectations.
Specify PCB coating by documenting your operating environment (humidity, chemicals, temperature range), selecting an appropriate coating type (parylene for aerospace-grade, acrylic for standard, silicone for flexibility), defining thickness (25-75 microns typical), and requiring compliance with IPC-CC-830C or MIL-I-46058C standards in your purchase agreement.

Coating Type Selection Guide
Different coatings suit different needs. Here's what we recommend based on years of agricultural drone production:
| Coating Type | Best For | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parylene 3 | Extreme environments, coastal areas | Ultra-thin, pinhole-free, excellent protection | Higher cost, not reworkable |
| Acrylic | Standard agricultural use | Low cost, easy rework, fast application | Less chemical resistance |
| Silicone | High temperature zones | Flexible, wide temp range (-55°C to 200°C) | Attracts dust if surface damaged |
| Urethane | Heavy chemical exposure | Excellent chemical resistance, tough | Hard to remove for repairs |
| Epoxy | Maximum durability | Hardest, best abrasion resistance | Brittle, not reworkable |
Writing Your Specification Document
Your RFQ should include specific technical requirements. Be precise. Vague language like "suitable coating" leads to problems. Instead, write clear specifications:
Environmental Requirements Section:
- Operating temperature: -20°C to +60°C
- Humidity exposure: Up to 95% RH
- Chemical exposure: Glyphosate-based herbicides, nitrogen fertilizers
- UV exposure: 8+ hours daily direct sunlight
- Salt spray: Coastal operation expected
Performance Requirements Section:
- Coating type: Parylene C or equivalent
- Thickness: 15-25 microns
- Dielectric strength 4: Minimum 500V/mil
- Moisture resistance: Pass 240 hours salt spray per ASTM B117 5
- Standard compliance: IPC-CC-830C 6 Class 3
Critical Areas to Specify
Not every component needs coating. Some areas must remain uncoated. Your specification should list both:
Areas Requiring Coating:
- Flight controller main board
- ESC (Electronic Speed Controller) boards
- Power distribution board
- GPS module PCB
- Sensor interface boards
Areas Requiring Masking (No Coating):
- Connector pins and sockets
- Test points
- LED indicators
- Heat sink contact surfaces
- Battery connection terminals
Negotiating with Your Supplier
When discussing coating with suppliers, ask specific questions. Request documentation. Our engineering team provides coating certificates and test reports to serious buyers. You should expect the same.
Ask these questions during negotiation:
- What coating brand and type do you use?
- What is your standard coating thickness?
- Can you provide coating material datasheets?
- Do you perform in-house coating or outsource?
- What inspection methods verify coating coverage?
- Can you coat specific boards to different specifications?
If a supplier cannot answer these questions clearly, consider that a red flag. Coating quality varies enormously between manufacturers.
What testing methods can I require to verify the quality of the conformal coating on my drone electronics?
We learned hard lessons about coating verification. Early in our export history, we trusted supplier claims without testing. Some batches arrived with incomplete coverage. Others had coating too thin to protect. Now we require specific tests before shipping any agricultural drone.
Require suppliers to perform visual inspection under UV light, coating thickness measurement via eddy current or cross-section analysis, adhesion testing per ASTM D3359, insulation resistance testing, and environmental testing including humidity exposure (85°C/85% RH for 1000 hours) and thermal cycling. Request test reports with batch traceability.

Essential Quality Tests
Every coated PCB batch should undergo these tests. They catch most common problems before drones ship to customers.
| Test Method | What It Checks | Standard | Pass Criteria |
|---|---|---|---|
| UV Inspection | Coverage completeness | Visual | No dark spots indicating missed areas |
| Thickness Measurement | Coating uniformity | IPC-TM-650 2.2.2 | Within specified range ±20% |
| Adhesion Test | Coating bond strength | ASTM D3359 | Rating 4B or better |
| Insulation Resistance | Electrical isolation | IPC-TM-650 2.6.3.1 | >1 GΩ at 500V DC |
| Humidity Exposure | Long-term moisture resistance | IPC-TM-650 2.6.3 | No visible defects, IR >100 MΩ |
UV Inspection Process
Most conformal coatings contain fluorescent additives. Under UV light 7 (365nm wavelength), coated areas glow blue or green. Uncoated areas appear dark. This makes coverage verification simple and fast.
When our quality team inspects boards, they check:
- Complete coverage of all specified components
- No bridging across connector pins
- Uniform fluorescence intensity
- No bubbles or voids in coating
- Clean edges at masking boundaries
Request UV inspection photos for each production batch. These images provide visual proof of coating quality.
Destructive vs Non-Destructive Testing
Some tests require sacrificing sample boards. Others can check every unit. Your specification should include both types.
Non-Destructive Tests (Every Unit):
- UV visual inspection
- Surface insulation resistance
- Visual defect check
Destructive Tests (Sample Basis):
- Cross-section thickness analysis
- Adhesion tape test
- Chemical resistance soak test
For production orders, we recommend destructive testing on 3-5 units per 1000-unit batch. This provides statistical confidence without excessive cost.
Environmental Stress Testing
Real agricultural conditions are hard to replicate. But accelerated environmental tests predict field performance. The most important tests include:
Temperature Humidity Bias Test (THB):
Boards operate under electrical load at 85°C and 85% relative humidity for 1000 hours. This simulates years of field exposure in weeks. Temperature Humidity Bias Test 8 Coating failures show as increased leakage current or visible corrosion.
Thermal Shock Testing:
Rapid cycling between -40°C and +125°C stresses coating adhesion. Thermal Shock Testing 9 Poor coatings crack or delaminate after 100-500 cycles. Good coatings survive 1000+ cycles without defects.
Salt Spray Testing:
Per ASTM B117, boards face continuous 5% salt fog at 35°C for 96-500 hours. This accelerates coastal corrosion. Examine boards for any signs of corrosion under or through the coating.
Documentation Requirements
Test results mean nothing without proper documentation. Require these records from your supplier:
- Test procedures used (reference specific standards)
- Equipment calibration certificates
- Raw test data with date stamps
- Pass/fail criteria applied
- Batch numbers linked to test results
- Inspector identification and signatures
- Photographs of any defects found
This documentation protects both parties. It proves coating quality at delivery time. If problems appear later, records help identify root cause.
Can I collaborate with my manufacturer to customize PCB protection for extreme farming environments?
One of our European customers operates drones in greenhouse environments with constant humidity and sulfur-based fumigants. Standard coating couldn't handle this combination. We worked together for six months to develop a custom solution. This collaboration saved their operation.
Yes, you can and should collaborate with manufacturers to customize PCB protection. Work with suppliers early in the design phase to select appropriate coating materials, define application processes, establish testing protocols for your specific environment, and develop rework procedures for field repairs. Most quality manufacturers welcome such partnerships.

Starting the Collaboration Process
Customization works best when both parties share information openly. Before contacting your manufacturer, document your specific challenges:
Environment Profile:
- Geographic operating region
- Seasonal variation details
- Specific chemicals used in operations
- Unusual stressors (volcanic soil, geothermal areas, etc.)
- Historical failure modes you've experienced
Operational Profile:
- Daily flight hours
- Maintenance interval requirements
- Field repair capabilities
- Storage conditions
- Expected service life
This information helps engineers select the right protection approach. Without it, they're guessing.
Hybrid Protection Approaches
Sometimes one coating type isn't enough. Extreme environments often require combining multiple protection methods. Our engineering team has developed several hybrid approaches:
| Environment | Primary Protection | Secondary Protection | Additional Measures |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coastal + Chemical | Parylene C coating | Selective potting on connectors | Sealed enclosures |
| High Humidity + UV | Silicone coating | UV-stable topcoat | Conformal venting |
| Extreme Cold | Flexible urethane | Heater elements | Thermal insulation |
| Heavy Chemical | Parylene + epoxy edge seal | Stainless hardware | Chemical-resistant gaskets |
Design Phase Integration
The best time to discuss coating is during product design. Coating affects thermal management, connector selection, and serviceability. Decisions made early save money later.
When we develop custom drones for agricultural clients, coating discussions start at the concept stage. We consider:
- Component placement for optimal coating access
- Connector types that seal well with coating
- Heat sink design accounting for coating insulation
- Test point accessibility after coating
- Rework zones for field repairs
Retrofitting coating onto existing designs often forces compromises. New designs can optimize for coating from the start.
Field Repair Considerations
Agricultural drones operate far from service centers. Field repairs are sometimes necessary. Your coating specification should address reworkability:
Rework-Friendly Options:
- Acrylic coatings remove easily with appropriate solvents
- Silicone coatings can be cut away and patched
- Some newer nanocoatings allow localized removal
Non-Reworkable Options:
- Parylene requires specialized equipment to remove
- Epoxy coatings are essentially permanent
- Potting compounds cannot be removed without damage
For agricultural applications, we generally recommend acrylic or silicone coatings unless extreme protection is required. The ability to repair boards in the field outweighs the superior protection of non-reworkable options for most customers.
Ongoing Collaboration
Customization shouldn't end at product delivery. Ongoing communication helps both parties improve. We ask customers to share:
- Field failure data and root cause analysis
- Environmental exposure logs
- Maintenance observations
- Suggestions for improvement
This feedback loop has helped us refine our coating processes repeatedly. Our current agricultural drone line benefits from five years of such collaborative improvement.
Cost Considerations for Custom Solutions
Custom coating solutions cost more than standard options. But they often prove cheaper than repeated failures. Here's how costs typically break down:
| Item | Standard Coating | Custom Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Material cost | $3-5/board | $8-15/board |
| Process development | $0 | $2,000-10,000 one-time |
| Testing validation | Minimal | $5,000-20,000 one-time |
| Production premium | 0% | 10-25% |
| Field failure reduction | Baseline | 50-90% improvement |
For fleet operators, the math usually favors custom solutions. The upfront investment pays back through reduced warranty claims and extended service life.
Conclusion
Proper conformal coating separates reliable agricultural drones from those that fail in the field. Specify coating type, thickness, and standards clearly in your RFQ. Require documented testing. Collaborate with manufacturers on custom solutions when standard options fall short. Your fleet's reliability depends on getting these details right from the start.
Footnotes
1. Provides a comprehensive overview of conformal coating and its purpose. ↩︎
2. Explains the phenomenon of dendritic growth in electronics and its causes. ↩︎
3. Replaced with an authoritative Wikipedia page providing a general overview of Parylene. ↩︎
4. Defines this critical electrical property of insulating materials. ↩︎
5. Provides the standard method for conducting salt spray corrosion tests. ↩︎
6. Details the industry standard for qualifying conformal coatings. ↩︎
7. Explains how UV light is used to inspect conformal coating coverage. ↩︎
8. Found a detailed explanation of Temperature Humidity Bias (THB) testing. ↩︎
9. Found a clear explanation of thermal shock testing. ↩︎