vonsteimel
Mechanical
- Oct 19, 2010
- 132
Greetings,
I encountered an issue today and I'm wondering how other places handle this.
I have a part that has been used for long time. It has now been significantly revised in such a way that the form, fit & function have changed. Therefore in accordance with our Technical Data System it must get a new number.
So now I have a new part number for basically an "old" part that has a lot of history. Where would I put the details about what has changed? Would I just fill in the revision block as a rev 0? (we use numerical revision designations, not letters).
Other companies just simply do not worry about it? I know the change details could potentially save us a lot of head-scratching down the road.
On another note; When a part is first created, what "revision" would the drawing be on? Is a new drawing a revision 1 drawing -- so that when it gets revised, it becomes a revision 2 drawing? Or is a new drawing considered a revision "0" drawing -- and after the first revision it becomes a revision 1 drawing?
The system we use is the first example. All drawings start at rev 1 level.(actually its a bit more complicated than that) What do others do?
Thanks,
VS
I encountered an issue today and I'm wondering how other places handle this.
I have a part that has been used for long time. It has now been significantly revised in such a way that the form, fit & function have changed. Therefore in accordance with our Technical Data System it must get a new number.
So now I have a new part number for basically an "old" part that has a lot of history. Where would I put the details about what has changed? Would I just fill in the revision block as a rev 0? (we use numerical revision designations, not letters).
Other companies just simply do not worry about it? I know the change details could potentially save us a lot of head-scratching down the road.
On another note; When a part is first created, what "revision" would the drawing be on? Is a new drawing a revision 1 drawing -- so that when it gets revised, it becomes a revision 2 drawing? Or is a new drawing considered a revision "0" drawing -- and after the first revision it becomes a revision 1 drawing?
The system we use is the first example. All drawings start at rev 1 level.(actually its a bit more complicated than that) What do others do?
Thanks,
VS