NMHG, AidanMc...
I have seen aerospace materials of all types [aluminum, magnesium, steel, CRES Ti, etc] with multiple specifications imprinted on the surface(s) of the raw stock and listed within the certification paperwork provided with that stock. In this instance the raw material vendor certifies that exact piece of material to be equal-to, or better-than, the requirements in each specification listed, by validation/certification testing. This valid practice by the material manufacturers is usually called cross-qualification. This allows the material to be used whenever one of the specs is called out in authoritative engineering data [drawings, etc].
Od, but reassuring, to see [for instance] aluminum sheet metal with AMS-QQ-A-250/X, and AMSXXXX and ASTM BXXX specifications listed... but this happens... and that sheet can be used in many-more applications.
Also, many organizations have engineering substitution or process documents which allow material variations and substitutability. For instance, when approved by engineering in this document: 7075-T73510 or -T73511 extrusions 'could' always replace -T73 extrusions'... but 'never the other-way-around'. Etc... There is economy and efficiency in this practice... but it has to be 'smart' and precise.
Regards, Wil Taylor
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