Mike, generally I agree that when new to a company you shouldn't go out guns blazing to change things.
There were no meaningfull standards, that's part of the reason my department was created. So when you've been hired to change things, leaving the Status Quo isn't an opton. That said I do believe my department made mistakes in this area in the first few months, some of them before I was hired, in not properly gauging what some common practices etc were.
The 'system' wasn't working: high rate of mistakes/rework on parts; stuck with vendors because they were the only ones who had worked out what the chicken scratch drawing was meant to say; lots of ecos to correct drawing errors etc.
The system wasn't evolved, people made up rules as they went along. If you asked 5 different people how to do something like an eco you'd get 5 different answers, and I don't mean just personal preferences.
Been here almost 2 years, not sure if I count as the new guy any more.
Your point about drawings being deliberatly misleading is something I've thought about. At least one vendor we use also supplies a competitor. However, surely even in that case the drawing needs to be clear enough for the vendor to make it (mostly talking machined parts)? Isn't this kind of concern better dealt with by having NDAs etc?
The military insists on easy to read drawings because the person interpreting the drawing may also be under fire at the time.
while it may just about be true for higher level schematics/assemblies etc I don't think its a major reason. I'm pretty sure the main reason is so that any competant organization can make it from the drawing.
KENAT, probably the least qualified checker you'll ever meet...