About six years ago we moved from paper job travelers and prints to access to the job routing and prints on computers on the shop floor. The prints were scanned as tif files and linked to routing steps. Three years ago we added a setup sheet, scanned first along with the prints. When brought up on screen in the shop the first page was the setup sheet, with any special instructions for cutting, forming, welding, special materials and finishes, marking, packaging, etc. The next page(s) was the print or prints.
We are now at the start of writing standard operating procedures for critical parts, particularly those with a containment status. We'll probably continue to use tif files for this, for shop access. Engineering controls the setup sheets currently, in Word format; any changes are handled in our area. QC will be working on the sop's, reviewing them with engineering (hopefully.)
We have all the tif files located on the network, sorted similarly to our cad data, but separate from it. This has helped with shop floor access, and with revision control. The tif files are smaller in size than native Word, SW, etc files, and scale easily on screen for viewing. We've been using Brava Reader for viewing.
The two main concerns I've had with setup sheets and work instructions have been revision control and substituting the work instruction for reading and complying to the prints. We've been successful with both, but it's not always easy.
Hope that's helpful. Back to work now. Diego