jstluise
Mechanical
- Apr 24, 2012
- 14
I apologize in advance if this would be better suited for the Configuration Management forum, but I thought it fit well here since it is kind of specific to Workgroup PDM.
I'm working on organizing a revision scheme for my company since it really hasn't been utilized at all. I realize that what may work well for one company may not work for another, but I'm just hoping to get some ideas from the forum. First, a little background on what kind of work we do:
We are a small R&D (mostly aerospace) company (~30 employees, ~10 SW users) which means we do a lot of concept CAD work for proposals and contracts as well as one-off prototyping. Most projects and contracts we have move pretty quickly, as most R&D work does. The farthest most projects get is prototyping, but we do have a handful of products that have been manufactured and sold to customers (very low quantities). While not having a revision scheme is okay for concept work, we're asking for trouble by not having it in place for parts we're actually building and even selling.
I've done some searching around for ideas about revision schemes as well as thinking about how a revision scheme would fit in with the workflow around here. Because a lot of our work moves so quickly I think keeping the revision scheme as simple as possible will have the best chance for success (i.e. people will actually use it). My thought is to just have a simple pre-release scheme and a scheme for once the part has been released for manufacturing. The basic scheme that I've seemed to settle on is:
Development: -.01 thru -.99, e.g. -.01, -.02, -.03. (dash in primary indicates development status)
Release: A thru Z.99, e.g. A, A.01, A.02, B, B.01. (alpha primary indicates major release, numeric secondary indicates minor change to release)
Also, I think having a working copy ( + ) would be beneficial at least in the development stage.
At first I was thinking we didn't need to deal with lifecycles, but after further thought having some simple rules might help with revision control. Maybe just having "Development", "Released", and "Obsolete", with rules to keep users from accidentally using a revision letter/number for the wrong status. No need to control document access or change owners with status changes. Also, having lifecyles enabled will give us more metadata if we want to utilize it.
Sorry for the wall of text, but if anyone is willing to share their experience that would be very helpful, especially if you have similar workflow (concept work, prototyping, etc). I'm sure I'll have some more questions but this is a start. Thanks!
I'm working on organizing a revision scheme for my company since it really hasn't been utilized at all. I realize that what may work well for one company may not work for another, but I'm just hoping to get some ideas from the forum. First, a little background on what kind of work we do:
We are a small R&D (mostly aerospace) company (~30 employees, ~10 SW users) which means we do a lot of concept CAD work for proposals and contracts as well as one-off prototyping. Most projects and contracts we have move pretty quickly, as most R&D work does. The farthest most projects get is prototyping, but we do have a handful of products that have been manufactured and sold to customers (very low quantities). While not having a revision scheme is okay for concept work, we're asking for trouble by not having it in place for parts we're actually building and even selling.
I've done some searching around for ideas about revision schemes as well as thinking about how a revision scheme would fit in with the workflow around here. Because a lot of our work moves so quickly I think keeping the revision scheme as simple as possible will have the best chance for success (i.e. people will actually use it). My thought is to just have a simple pre-release scheme and a scheme for once the part has been released for manufacturing. The basic scheme that I've seemed to settle on is:
Development: -.01 thru -.99, e.g. -.01, -.02, -.03. (dash in primary indicates development status)
Release: A thru Z.99, e.g. A, A.01, A.02, B, B.01. (alpha primary indicates major release, numeric secondary indicates minor change to release)
Also, I think having a working copy ( + ) would be beneficial at least in the development stage.
At first I was thinking we didn't need to deal with lifecycles, but after further thought having some simple rules might help with revision control. Maybe just having "Development", "Released", and "Obsolete", with rules to keep users from accidentally using a revision letter/number for the wrong status. No need to control document access or change owners with status changes. Also, having lifecyles enabled will give us more metadata if we want to utilize it.
Sorry for the wall of text, but if anyone is willing to share their experience that would be very helpful, especially if you have similar workflow (concept work, prototyping, etc). I'm sure I'll have some more questions but this is a start. Thanks!