vonsteimel
Mechanical
Greetings,
I work for a small mfg company making recreation vehicles. As stated, we are small and have relatively few drafters compared to a company manufacturing products of similar complexity. We fab most of the parts we use in production and the stuff we do purchase, almost always gets modified. There are tons of revisions & changes happening all the time.
To make things more difficult, we do not have a real drawing system nor a rev system. Revisions have no designations and are not tracked anywhere except on the drawing (in the rev block, we write a few words). This means there is no way to tell for sure what the most up-to-date revision is... And this is a Major headache when it comes to servicing and/or supplying parts for older vehicles, not to mention production.
Because the boss doesn't like alpha-numeric systems, I drafted up a brief drawing system using numbers instead of letter designations. Still he asks, why can't we use dates instead of rev numbers? And I had a hard time coming up with a good explanation for him. I suppose we could if we wanted... Has this been done before? Why is no longer the std? Everything I've known has always been letters....
What are the origins and concepts behind the standard letter revision system? And when a company wants to revert to an older revision for a part, do they roll back their system to that old rev or do the just re-issue that old rev with a new rev #?
The logistics of a whole drawing & revision system can be pretty tricky, especially when factoring in the requirements & preferences of an established company...
Where is a good source for figuring out the ins & out needed to setup an adequate drawing & rev system for the future? I've got a document from NASA/Langley on their rev system but its a little above our capabilities. There aren't a lot of dollars available to pour into consultants & software systems so I've got to get this up and running with just plain ole elbow grease... Any help will be appreciated.
Thanks,
VS
I work for a small mfg company making recreation vehicles. As stated, we are small and have relatively few drafters compared to a company manufacturing products of similar complexity. We fab most of the parts we use in production and the stuff we do purchase, almost always gets modified. There are tons of revisions & changes happening all the time.
To make things more difficult, we do not have a real drawing system nor a rev system. Revisions have no designations and are not tracked anywhere except on the drawing (in the rev block, we write a few words). This means there is no way to tell for sure what the most up-to-date revision is... And this is a Major headache when it comes to servicing and/or supplying parts for older vehicles, not to mention production.
Because the boss doesn't like alpha-numeric systems, I drafted up a brief drawing system using numbers instead of letter designations. Still he asks, why can't we use dates instead of rev numbers? And I had a hard time coming up with a good explanation for him. I suppose we could if we wanted... Has this been done before? Why is no longer the std? Everything I've known has always been letters....
What are the origins and concepts behind the standard letter revision system? And when a company wants to revert to an older revision for a part, do they roll back their system to that old rev or do the just re-issue that old rev with a new rev #?
The logistics of a whole drawing & revision system can be pretty tricky, especially when factoring in the requirements & preferences of an established company...
Where is a good source for figuring out the ins & out needed to setup an adequate drawing & rev system for the future? I've got a document from NASA/Langley on their rev system but its a little above our capabilities. There aren't a lot of dollars available to pour into consultants & software systems so I've got to get this up and running with just plain ole elbow grease... Any help will be appreciated.
Thanks,
VS