SAITAETGrad
New member
- Sep 20, 2003
- 277
Hi CM experts. I tried to search out a solution to my problem but came up dry.
For standard and commercial parts with significant part numbers, is it ever reasonable to not fully define the part number to imply alternates?
One example would be discrete fasteners which are available with significant part number lengths. In the factory setting, assemblers will size the length on installation and choose from on-hand consumable supplies. For field alterations, the parts are supplied at an oversized length to be cut down by the installer. Would it be fine to not simply exclude the length portion of the suffix?
Another example would be second sourced electronic parts where the last digit is a tolerance code. Would it be reasonable to exclude the tolerance code to allow the purchaser to select from available supply?
To be clear, this would be directly on an assembly BOM and not contained within a source or specification control drawing.
One response may be 'it depends on your standards'. If so, what advice would you provide on structuring this standard so that it is clear for all? How do you avoid drowning in technical debt when past practices are no longer accepted based on the way the wind has blown in the quality department?
There are other ways this could be attempted such as a wild card or a note. What is the best way?
Thank you for your help. I'm sorry if my question is trivial or repetitive.
For standard and commercial parts with significant part numbers, is it ever reasonable to not fully define the part number to imply alternates?
One example would be discrete fasteners which are available with significant part number lengths. In the factory setting, assemblers will size the length on installation and choose from on-hand consumable supplies. For field alterations, the parts are supplied at an oversized length to be cut down by the installer. Would it be fine to not simply exclude the length portion of the suffix?
Another example would be second sourced electronic parts where the last digit is a tolerance code. Would it be reasonable to exclude the tolerance code to allow the purchaser to select from available supply?
To be clear, this would be directly on an assembly BOM and not contained within a source or specification control drawing.
One response may be 'it depends on your standards'. If so, what advice would you provide on structuring this standard so that it is clear for all? How do you avoid drowning in technical debt when past practices are no longer accepted based on the way the wind has blown in the quality department?
There are other ways this could be attempted such as a wild card or a note. What is the best way?
Thank you for your help. I'm sorry if my question is trivial or repetitive.