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kcheves
Aerospace
- Apr 29, 2010
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Greetings,
Please forgive me if this has been asked before. I have searched the archives and drawn a blank.
I'm in charge of a CM group for a manufacturer of communications products that are used (primarily) in Space and Airborne applications. Our company President recently suggested that the rules that we are following regarding when to make a revision change vs. a part number change are not consistent with his understanding of how this should work. In discussing this with him and my CM manager, our disconnect relates to a detail that I have not seen described in MIL-STD-973, EIA-649, or any of the other standards that we reference in our CM process.
Our company standard for interchangeability is that if an item is changed in such a way that full backwards/forwards interchangeability is broken, it must be assigned a new part number, and all superior assemblies must receive a new part number, up to the level of assembly where interchangeability is re-established. Simple enough.
Consider an assembly (ABC-1) that is in production at Rev A, and a design defect is discovered that requires rework. There is no change to the form/fit/function/reliability of the assembly, and when rework is complete it will function within the original specification. We have never shipped any of the end items that use this assembly, but there are one or more assemblies in WIP that will need to receive the rework.
In most cases, we would write a change order that would take this assembly from Rev A to Rev B, and we would disposition all of the WIP as rework. The Rev A build documentation would be recalled from the shop floor and replaced with rev B documentation. All units in WIP would be built and inspected to the Rev B documentation, and would ultimately be marked ss Rev B's. We don't do a part number change because the entire wild population has been captured and reworked, and our interchangeability test is applied ot the assembly AFTER it has been reworked.
Our company president believes that because the Rev A design did not work as intended, it is not interchangeable with the Rev B version version that does work. He is in effect applying the interchangeability test to the assembly BEFORE it has been reworked to its new configuration, and is suggesting that we need to assign a new part number when we implement the change rather than rolling the revision. So instead of part number ABC-1 Rev A going to ABC-1 Rev B, it would go to ABC-2 Rev A. His reason for advocating this appraoch is primarily that he doesn't trust that the dispostion specified on the ECO is always executed with 100% accuracy. This creates the possibility that the revision of the product with the defect could escape rework and (since we don't stock or kit by revision) pass to the next higher assembly or ship to a customer.
It would be very helpful for me to hear your thoughts on how you think this should work, or how you handle this within your CM system. If you have references to definitive standards, texts, or articles, I'd appreciate those as well.
Thanks in advance!
Kit Cheves
San Diego, CA
Please forgive me if this has been asked before. I have searched the archives and drawn a blank.
I'm in charge of a CM group for a manufacturer of communications products that are used (primarily) in Space and Airborne applications. Our company President recently suggested that the rules that we are following regarding when to make a revision change vs. a part number change are not consistent with his understanding of how this should work. In discussing this with him and my CM manager, our disconnect relates to a detail that I have not seen described in MIL-STD-973, EIA-649, or any of the other standards that we reference in our CM process.
Our company standard for interchangeability is that if an item is changed in such a way that full backwards/forwards interchangeability is broken, it must be assigned a new part number, and all superior assemblies must receive a new part number, up to the level of assembly where interchangeability is re-established. Simple enough.
Consider an assembly (ABC-1) that is in production at Rev A, and a design defect is discovered that requires rework. There is no change to the form/fit/function/reliability of the assembly, and when rework is complete it will function within the original specification. We have never shipped any of the end items that use this assembly, but there are one or more assemblies in WIP that will need to receive the rework.
In most cases, we would write a change order that would take this assembly from Rev A to Rev B, and we would disposition all of the WIP as rework. The Rev A build documentation would be recalled from the shop floor and replaced with rev B documentation. All units in WIP would be built and inspected to the Rev B documentation, and would ultimately be marked ss Rev B's. We don't do a part number change because the entire wild population has been captured and reworked, and our interchangeability test is applied ot the assembly AFTER it has been reworked.
Our company president believes that because the Rev A design did not work as intended, it is not interchangeable with the Rev B version version that does work. He is in effect applying the interchangeability test to the assembly BEFORE it has been reworked to its new configuration, and is suggesting that we need to assign a new part number when we implement the change rather than rolling the revision. So instead of part number ABC-1 Rev A going to ABC-1 Rev B, it would go to ABC-2 Rev A. His reason for advocating this appraoch is primarily that he doesn't trust that the dispostion specified on the ECO is always executed with 100% accuracy. This creates the possibility that the revision of the product with the defect could escape rework and (since we don't stock or kit by revision) pass to the next higher assembly or ship to a customer.
It would be very helpful for me to hear your thoughts on how you think this should work, or how you handle this within your CM system. If you have references to definitive standards, texts, or articles, I'd appreciate those as well.
Thanks in advance!
Kit Cheves
San Diego, CA