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Connector Design Innovation for Space-Saving, High-Performance Solutions

As mobile and wearable devices add more sensors, cameras and radios, PCB real estate is at a premium. Engineers are tasked with delivering greater functionality in smaller footprints while maintaining performance, yield and reliability under tough thermal and mechanical conditions. Molex collaborated directly with leading original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) to engineer a four-row connector design that reduces the PCB footprint, supports high current requirements in tight spaces and scales easily across high-volume applications.

A Collaborative Innovation in Connector Design


Across mobile devices, wearables, medical sensors, smart glasses, Internet of Things (IoT) and automotive cameras, engineers face a growing pressure to fit more functionality into less space. Every square millimeter on PCBs is under siege from added sensors, radio frequency (RF) chains and larger batteries. To stay competitive, OEMs need ultra-fine-pitch connectors that deliver high signal density, high power and high durability, all within a footprint the size of a grain of rice. However, form factor alone is not enough. New connector designs must also drop into existing surface mount technology (SMT), flexible printed circuits (FPC) and other standard factory processes.

Meeting these demands called for connector innovations that went beyond incremental advances. Molex engineers applied a cross-disciplinary approach, pairing advanced tooling and materials science with rapid, collaborative prototyping. They developed a four-row contact layout at 0.175mm pitch, enabling dramatic footprint reduction without trade-offs in performance. Through close coordination with OEMs and contract fabricators, the team refined every detail—from low-insertion-force mechanics and gold-plated copper contacts to tooling tolerances that ensured drop-in placement and high-speed assembly compatibility.

The result was a compact, robust and production-ready solution that is already transforming how designers think about high-density interconnects. Quad-Row Connectors support up to 4.0A, maintain contact resistance and pass aggressive cycle, thermal and vibration tests—delivering reliable connections even under harsh use conditions. With successful qualification in Japan, Korea and the United States, and less than 1% fallout, the platform is now in volume production and scaling fast. Co-development continues with global customers to define the next generation of compact, high-performance board-to-board connectors.

Molex Quad-Row Connectors.

Redefining Space in Mobile Devices


Mobile devices include increasingly dense functionality, causing a shortage in available PCB space. Engineers face mounting pressure to support additional features without compromising performance or battery life. Standard two-row, 0.35mm-pitch connectors are reaching their physical limits, making it harder to balance innovation with limited real estate. The problem intensifies as new device categories such as AR wearables and implantable medical sensors push design envelopes even further, demanding breakthroughs in ultra-compact, high-density interconnects.

To address this, Molex leveraged its deep micro-connectivity expertise and materials science leadership to reimagine connector design. Through extensive teardown analyses and ideation with OEM and manufacturing partners, Molex envisioned a new architecture: halving the pitch and doubling the contact rows within the same footprint. 

This innovation culminated in the Quad-Row board-to-board connector, which features a 0.175mm, four-row layout that cuts PCB area by over 30%. Designed as a drop-in replacement for existing SMT/FPC lines, it enables faster deployment without requiring new equipment or process changes. Its modular architecture simplifies customization, making it adaptable to emerging use cases.

Molex Director of Micro Connectors Taekeon Park.
“We created Quad-Row because consumer devices are fully close-packed, and customers need an ultra-small connector—so we imagined a micro-connector the size of a grain of rice to help them pack in more features.”
Taekeon Park
Director, Micro Connectors
Molex

Engineering Excellence


Achieving 0.175mm pitch in a four-row configuration required Molex engineers to push the limits of micro-manufacturing. At this scale, maintaining contact reliability, insertion force and mechanical alignment becomes exponentially more difficult. They also had to ensure robust power and signal integrity with resistance to vibration, thermal stress and repeated mating cycles across the product’s life span. Translating this vision into a scalable, repeatable solution posed one of the most complex design-for-manufacturing challenges in the history of the company.

Molex Group Product Manager Kota Kamezaki.
“Quad-Row is a super space-saving board-to-board connector—half the pitch of existing designs—enabling over 30% PCB footprint reduction in smartwatches, phones and wearables.”
Kota Kamezaki
Group Product Manager
Molex

The engineering team responded with a novel dual-overmolding process where a first shot forms two rows of contacts, and a second precisely aligns and locks in the additional rows without introducing insertion errors. This advancement was supported by rigorous, cross-functional sprints across simulation, materials, tooling and pilot-line validation. Working across three international sites, the team rapidly iterated prototypes and conducted qualification testing that spanned electrical, mechanical and environmental conditions. At the same time, active research continues on sub-0.15mm pitch architectures and ruggedized materials for high-density IoT environments.

This disciplined approach resulted in a connector the size of a grain of rice that consistently delivers 3.0A to 4.0A from –40ºC to +85ºC with less than 1% yield fallout on standard SMT and FPC lines. A global knowledge-transfer process and in-line alignment features ensured high repeatability across multiple production sites. The outcome is not just a component but a scalable manufacturing breakthrough born from a deep bench of engineering talent and relentless problem solving.

Engineers Discussing a Manufacturing Process.

Designing Together: From Prototype to Breakthrough


Reducing connector pitch introduced far more than technical hurdles, challenging the compatibility of new designs with existing customer assembly lines. The smallest alignment error could lead to low yields or failed installations. With a complex network of stakeholders including OEM design teams, contract manufacturers, and PCB and flex suppliers, Molex engineers had to deliver a solution that met high-density performance goals without compromising manufacturability or time-to-market.

To bridge these competing demands, they relied on agile co-development strategies. Rapid prototyping cycles, shared tooling and real-world design-for-manufacturing reviews enabled swift feedback and continuous improvement. Globally coordinated engineering teams that spanned product, process, quality and field applications worked in tandem with customer sites. Standardized SMT/FPC test fixtures allowed OEMs to generate real-time performance data, while weekly scrums quickly addressed issues from lab to line, cutting development cycle times by half.

Molex Director of Sales Arash Mikaeeili.
“We experimented early and often—with multiple ideas, rapid prototypes and customer feedback—so we could fail fast, learn quickly and land on a breakthrough design that supports millions of devices annually.”
Arash Mikaeeili
Director of Sales
Molex

This hands-on collaboration produced more than a high-performance connector. It created a scalable design ecosystem where multi-site prototyping cells, aligned test procedures and shared knowledge repositories ensured long-term yield stability and field success. The result is a hardware innovation that continues to find new applications. Quad-Row variants are now piloting in augmented reality/virtual reality (AR/VR) displays and edge-AI modules. 

Quad-Row in Global Production


Scaling a connector as small and precise as Quad-Row demanded synchronized global execution. Molex faced the challenge of transferring an intricate dual-overmolding process across international manufacturing sites while meeting the high-quality thresholds expected by leading OEMs. Design teams had to work against tight production timelines to avoid delays in product availability and minimize the risk of requalification.

To coordinate all these actions, Molex activated a proven knowledge-transfer model: initial pilot runs in Shizuoka, expansion to Kagoshima and replication at facilities in Korea. Each site implemented standard 0.35mm mounting technology compatibility and self-aligning connector features to drive production efficiency. Real-time performance data across all lines supported continuous process refinements, while a dedicated ramp-up team ensured alignment between process engineers, quality leaders and customer-facing support to accelerate readiness while maintaining consistency.

Today, Molex delivers seamless global supply through three fully synchronized production centers, achieving one of the highest shipping volumes of Quad-Row board-to-board micro-connectors in the industry. A fourth site is already in planning to serve expanding markets such as medical and next-generation wearables. 

Molex Lead Engineer Daishi Gondo.
“The two-step overmolding to build four contact rows was a new manufacturing technology—and collaborating closely with our process teams turned those challenges into our most exciting engineering success.”
Daishi Gondo
Lead Engineer
Molex

From Challenge to Connector


The development of the world’s first 0.175mm-pitch Quad-Row Connector marked a bold leap in micro-connector innovation. Faced with rising component density and shrinking PCB space, Molex engineers reimagined conventional connector architecture and achieved a breakthrough design that cuts the board footprint by more than 30%. Today, that same solution has set a global shipping milestone, earning its place as one of the most widely deployed micro-connectors of its kind. 

Customer collaboration was fundamental to this achievement. Molex worked closely with OEMs and manufacturing partners to align the connector with real-world assembly lines, performance targets and roadmap needs. Frequent design reviews, iterative prototyping and site-specific testing helped transform an engineering concept into a scalable commercial success.

The outcome is the world’s smallest connector—one that delivers the densest connections within a limited footprint. Built with gold-plated copper-alloy contacts and a low-profile LCP housing rated UL94 V-0, the micro-connector is engineered for robust electrical performance while meeting the compactness and reliability demands of next-generation miniaturized applications.

Molex Quad-Row Headers and Receptacles.

This Gen-1 accomplishment might seem like the finish line, but it is actually the launchpad. Molex remains committed to advancing connector technology through continuous improvement and deeper co-development. Gen 2 and Gen 3 Quad-Row variants are now in pilot testing, with enhanced capabilities aimed at AR/VR systems, medical sensors and the next wave of IoT innovation.

Woman reading on a tablet.

Get in Touch

Interested in learning more? We’d love to hear from you! At Molex, we believe in the transformative power of creating connections. We use innovation, engineering excellence, commitment to quality and reliability, and a superior customer experience to improve communication, elevate experiences and engage and inspire people everywhere. Reach out to learn about how we can help you.