I'll have to disagree with several and say that ideally all drawings, with the possible exception of some in house tooling and the like, should be properly checked by a suitably qualified person.
I'm primarily a checker (at least for now), but still make my own drawings sometimes. The last one I did I'd gone over several times on the screen and printed out a copy and went over it till it looked good. I passed it to a contract checker we have to take a look and he almost immediately found a mistake, just the one but a mistake that would have caused a problem had it gone out. People make mistakes.
Training is definitely a big part of the solution (or lack there of the problem) but people also have to be
forced encouraged to apply that training. A slightly trite saying, but arguably fairly true in many cases, says "People do not do what you expect, people do what you inspect". Everywhere I've been people have been pressed on schedule, it's easy to cut corners on drafting in that situation.
Also, done correctly, having prints checked is itself training in a very practical, hands on, real world, way. It's pretty much how I learnt to draw, I'd done a little at uni & high school but having my prints bled on is what got me up to par, not some highly theoretical, very brief, training class.
(We manage to screw this up though, while permanent engineers create many of the drawings I check, the redline incorporation (and sometimes all the detail drafting) is given to interns to do. So the engineers don't really get the feedback [they are usually asked to approve the redlines but I'm not sure how much attention they pay] and don't really learn.)
The analogy to inspection as dingy puts it isn't quite correct in my mind. Places I've worked do have full inspection of first articles most of the time, moving to sampling etc after that. Well the drawing is used to get the data to create & inspect the first article, so it's arguably critical that it's verified for accuracy in its own right. So I'm still convinced that checking is worth the effort even though I'd be lying if I said I loved doing it myself.
Still this is getting slightly off topic and has been discussed before. Theres a bunch here who still think checking's relevant, there's others that think it went out with the ark, in my time on this site I'm not sure anyone's ever changed their mind.
I can't say I look forward to seeing what happens round here if the Engineering Director really has persuaded the new manufacturing VP to accept the same crap level of drawings we used to have before I started.
KENAT,
Have you reminded yourself of faq731-376 recently, or taken a look at posting policies: