Interesting thread.
I’ve worked both at a place without dedicated checkers and at one with.
From that limited experience I would say that having a dedicated checker, if the size of organization permits is the better option. Obviously that checker needs to be good with the ability to teach/communicate not just an eye for detail or a long list of unjustified drawing prejudices.
If you can’t justify a dedicated full time checker then I’d suggest that designating one designer/draughtsman/engineer to do all checking (except his own work which you’ll need a second person for), preferably one with a good mix of experience and eye for detail, is the best alternative. This is what we moved toward at the place I worked without a dedicated checker just before I left.
Sourcing all drawings through one person (or for larger organizations a few people) better ensures consistency, especially if they have a good set of standards, both Industry, company and if applicable customer to check to.
Having everyone check, although better than none isn’t good from a consistency point of view and some people just aren’t good at checking even though they may be an OK engineer/draughtsman. Certainly my having to check drawings when I had less than a years experience was a joke, you could have slipped almost anything past me.
Design reviews are good from a top level/functionality point of view but from my experience even the most exhaustive one I’ve been to; which had around 10+ attendees from various departments and lasted for a very long afternoon reviewing a design with only around 20 drawings; didn’t spot all the problems in the drawing pack. They aren’t good for detail drawing checking or things like tolerance analysis or interference analysis.
As to checking your own work, even some really experienced guys I’ve worked with, who knew the standards really well (“ If the drafters/designers/engineers would only LEARN and USE what the proper rules are...") made mistakes which I could sometimes spot, let alone all the ones I missed. Having a second pair of eyes is always better in my opinion. There’s no point having standards/rules etc if someone doesn’t monitor compliance to them and enforce them, even with the best of intent we all make mistakes or under pressure will cut corners etc.
As to what checkers check, some companies have different levels of checking. For instance the most basic might just be to check that the title block is fully populated and there are no really obvious mistakes, missing dims etc. The next level might be to check this and if it fully complies to standards. The highest level would also check tolerances, clashes/interfaces and basic functionality. There could be other levels in between.
“Frankly someone who thinks it is okay to dimension using thick phantom lines would be looking for another job from day one, I expect certain standards from qualified employees.” Unfortunately it seems that really good draughtsman (and I don’t claim to be a really good one) are a dying breed. The course at my university was very brief and from some of the interns and apprentices I’ve worked with I haven’t found any that had really good drawing training, plus a lot of time seems to be spent learning what the CAD can do, not necessarily what you should do with it. Unless they learn on the job, where having checkers is invaluable, they may never learn and eventually there wont be enough. There seems to be a school of thought that just knowing the CAD software is enough, no real knowledge of either drawing/design communication or engineering is needed, seems kind of dumb to me.
Sorry my first post was so long,
I’ll try and keep it short next time but this is a hot topic at my place at the moment, so I’ve been thinking about it a lot.