greg2835
Industrial
- Sep 25, 2013
- 52
In my experience all employers have employed the "every change gets a revision." Meaning if I have Part1 at Rev A, get it manufactured and sent back to me, then find out it doesn't fit, I then revise Part1 to Rev B (no new part number).
I am aware of the "parts get no revisions" rule and it makes sense to me, but am curious how it plays out. Lets say I make part 12345, and at some point after release a change needs to be made. By now part numbers have been generated by others in the company, so I create the next sequential number, let's say 12406. This p/n goes through the approval process and is eventually released, and no further changes need to be made.
What should I then do with initial part number 12345 in the system? I guess I could do nothing and leave it as is, but would you recommend an "obsolete" or "superseded" note? I also fear tracability will be an issue, so perhaps those notes are necessary with identifying new part numbers. To assist with this issue, I thought about having an indexing system for creating part numbers such as initial part being XXXXX-01, then index the "-" number for each change (XXXXX-02, then XXXXX-03, etc.). This IMO at least implies those lower "-" numbers to be obsolete/superseded and also makes the history of that part much easier to trace.
That's it for now, I might add some more detail if a discussion gets started. Let me know your thoughts!
Greg2835
Mechanical Engineer
I am aware of the "parts get no revisions" rule and it makes sense to me, but am curious how it plays out. Lets say I make part 12345, and at some point after release a change needs to be made. By now part numbers have been generated by others in the company, so I create the next sequential number, let's say 12406. This p/n goes through the approval process and is eventually released, and no further changes need to be made.
What should I then do with initial part number 12345 in the system? I guess I could do nothing and leave it as is, but would you recommend an "obsolete" or "superseded" note? I also fear tracability will be an issue, so perhaps those notes are necessary with identifying new part numbers. To assist with this issue, I thought about having an indexing system for creating part numbers such as initial part being XXXXX-01, then index the "-" number for each change (XXXXX-02, then XXXXX-03, etc.). This IMO at least implies those lower "-" numbers to be obsolete/superseded and also makes the history of that part much easier to trace.
That's it for now, I might add some more detail if a discussion gets started. Let me know your thoughts!
Greg2835
Mechanical Engineer