zappedagain
Electrical
- Jul 19, 2005
- 1,074
When I have similar assemblies, such as two cables that are wired the same with two different lengths, I have one assembly procedure (AP) that describes how to build both. For example, build 33-01 with 10" leads, and 33-02 with 3" leads. Initially this starts out fine, with everything at Revision A (33-01-A, 33-02-A, AP33-A).
When a change comes along it gets a little weird. For example, if the length on 33-02 needs to change to 3.5", the revision will increase for AP33 and 33-02 (AP33-B and 33-02-B, respectively). But what happens with 33-01? Should AP-33-B say to build 33-02-B and 33-01-A? Or should the revision on 33-01 increase to stay in sync with the AP so AP33-B build 33-01-B and 33-02-B?
In the past I've seen confusion when the revision on the AP and the part don't match ("that's a rev B - what, the part or the AP?"). For that reason we would bump the revision on 33-01 even though there were no changes (except the labeling). The ECO would state to use all the 33-01-A up and then start using 33-01-B.
At my present company I'm getting push-back about having a meaningless revision bump due to the cost of ECOs. When we purchase 33-01-B, the contract manufacturer (CM) will need a new set of drawings so they can verify their procedures (and update the labeling process).
Or should 33-01 and 33-02 each get their own assembly procedure? The reason I haven't liked this in the past is that it is error prone; a fix can be made to one and not the other.
I'm sure I'm not the first engineer to have this situation. How do you handle this?
Thanks,
John D
When a change comes along it gets a little weird. For example, if the length on 33-02 needs to change to 3.5", the revision will increase for AP33 and 33-02 (AP33-B and 33-02-B, respectively). But what happens with 33-01? Should AP-33-B say to build 33-02-B and 33-01-A? Or should the revision on 33-01 increase to stay in sync with the AP so AP33-B build 33-01-B and 33-02-B?
In the past I've seen confusion when the revision on the AP and the part don't match ("that's a rev B - what, the part or the AP?"). For that reason we would bump the revision on 33-01 even though there were no changes (except the labeling). The ECO would state to use all the 33-01-A up and then start using 33-01-B.
At my present company I'm getting push-back about having a meaningless revision bump due to the cost of ECOs. When we purchase 33-01-B, the contract manufacturer (CM) will need a new set of drawings so they can verify their procedures (and update the labeling process).
Or should 33-01 and 33-02 each get their own assembly procedure? The reason I haven't liked this in the past is that it is error prone; a fix can be made to one and not the other.
I'm sure I'm not the first engineer to have this situation. How do you handle this?
Thanks,
John D