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Elementary, Mr. Watson: The Four Horsemen of Copper Confusion
If there were a PCB Design Dictionary of Confusing Terms, the cover would feature four words that have baffled generations of engineers: polygons, pours, planes, and floods—or what I refer to as the four horsemen of copper confusion. They sound simple, as if they belong in a geometry textbook or a weather report, but in PCB design, they overlap, develop, and sound interchangeable until you realize they aren't.
Ask 10 designers to explain the difference and you'll get 10 answers, three sighs, and at least one person saying, "It depends on the software." These four terms have been misused, redefined, and occasionally blamed for design errors that weren't their fault. Poor copper can't catch a break. Welcome to a very confusing concept in PCB design. These four terms, in fact, describe how copper is distributed on printed circuit boards. It's one of those topics where history, technology, and habit have become entangled like a poorly routed trace.
To understand why they’re confusing, we need to rewind to the early days of manual PCB design, when designers sat at light tables and hand-drew on transparent Mylar sheets, adding black adhesive tape to represent copper traces. Each roll of tape was a specific line width. You built your circuit one strip at a time, like copper origami, and went home with bits of black tape all over you and nicks in your fingers. If you have never hand-taped a PCB, I recommend trying it, not just for the experience, but also to appreciate today’s modern tools.
When manual PCB designers wanted a large copper area for ground or power, they didn’t draw it; they stuck down a solid sheet of black film. If they wanted a clearance, they carefully sliced away the film with a razor blade. Those larger areas of copper appeared to have been poured or flooded onto the sheet. The language stuck.
When early computer ECAD tools arrived in the 1980s, engineers carried those classic terms into the digital world. "Let's flood the ground" meant “fill that area with copper." That's how our linguistic confusion began.
Those first PCB CAD programs—Protel, PADS, OrCAD, and others—were miracles compared to Mylar and tape, but we still had to find a way to automate that same "fill with copper" process. So, software engineers borrowed a concept from computer graphics called “flood fill,” which is the same algorithm behind the "paint bucket" tool in art programs. Click inside a shape, and the computer automatically fills it with color (or in this case, copper). Thus, the term “flood” became part of the PCB vocabulary. Designers would select an area and run the "flood" command to fill it, but when they moved a trace or pad, they would have to re-flood the whole thing. Many late nights were spent watching copper slowly refill the screen like an incoming tide. It was tedious but magical when your board slowly came alive in glowing copper zones, and if you had your colors set up correctly, it made it look like Walt Disney had thrown up on your screen.
However, nothing stands still in PCB design, which was the case with ECAD tools. They replaced that static "flood" with something more innovative—the polygon pour, which allowed the drawing of boundaries (as a polygon) and assignment of a specific net. Then, the software automatically filled it with copper, adhering to clearance and thermal rules. If you had to move a component or reroute a trace, the pour could automatically adjust to accommodate the changes. Suddenly, copper was intelligent. This was the difference between filling a bucket manually and installing an automatic sprinkler system. It was the same water but with more intelligent control.
However, the old terminology remained. Designers still said "flood" when they meant "pour." Some even used both: "Re-flood that polygon pour." Yes, it was confusing; however, it was accepted, and everyone knew what it meant.
While polygons ruled the outer layers, another idea was taking shape inside the board: planes—solid sheets of copper dedicated to a single purpose—either grounding or power. Instead of drawing copper, you define a plane in the layer stack.
Planes act like copper highways. They have low resistance, low noise, and excel at dissipating heat. They make circuits more stable, signals cleaner, and layouts easier to live with. Why this isn't clear depends on who you are speaking to: The veteran PCB designer who used old tools still says "flood" even though they're using "dynamic pours." Beginners see large copper areas and assume they're planes. The ECAD documentation doesn't help—casually calling a polygon a "ground plane." And the ECAD tools blur the line by having a polygon pour on internal layers or split planes on signal layers.
I have a method for resolving this issue, especially for new PCB designers when they encounter different terms being used. The planes are the ocean—broad, deep, and stable. Polygon pours are ponds you dig yourself—flexible and local. Flooding is just filling them with water.
The confusion surrounding these terms is nostalgic. It reminds us how far PCB design has come: from X-ACTO knives and tape to dynamic polygons. Some may still say "flood the board" because it connects us to those designers who once literally cut copper with razor blades. It's a small way of keeping the craft's history alive. So, the next time you click “repour all” and watch the copper shimmer into place, take a moment to appreciate it. That single click represents decades of evolution, countless innovations, and a thousand cups of coffee.
This column originally appeared in the November 2025 issue of Design007 Magazine.
More Columns from Elementary, Mr. Watson
Elementary, Mr. Watson: Navigating the Dreaded DFX TriangleElementary, Mr. Watson: APEX EXPO—The Ghosts of Past, Present, and Future
Elementary, Mr. Watson: Why You Can’t Afford to Miss APEX EXPO 2026
Elementary Mr. Watson: Where the PCB Ends and Advanced Packaging Begins
Elementary, Mr. Watson: Design Intent Over Design Speed
Elementary, Mr. Watson: Finding Balance on the Seesaw and in Life
Elementary, Mr. Watson: Why Traces Alone Won’t Save You
Elementary, Mr. Watson: Heat—The Hidden Villain of Power Electronics