Page modified: wtorek, lipiec 12, 2011 22:20:56
Quality specification is part of the quality management
After EN ISO 9000:2000, Punkt 3.2.9 is quality specification as "part of the quality management, which is directed toward the establishment of the quality goals and the necessary remark processes as well as associated resources for the fulfilment of the quality goals" defined.
Quality specification covers:
- APQP: (Advanced Product quality Planing, part of the American QA 9000) continuous project management for the product and quality specification, suitably for all phases of the development process. A goal is to have a uniform product-related documentation structure/hierarchy which supply necessary transparency to the user with (manufacturer) over the manufacture happening. Thus the Produktionslenkung is to be simplified. (All project and product-relevant information and documents are central planned, supervised and administered)
- FMEA: Possibility of error and influence analysis. A structured, systematic work engineering, in order to already identify error risks during the product development process. To be prevented a goal is the forwarding of incorrect parts by the planning and conversion of suitable measures error causes and thus errors to be avoided and/or, if the cause removal is clearly more uneconomic.
- Control plan: Particularly in the automobile and automobile supporting industry the requirement of a complete documentation of all quality-assurance measures exists during the entire creation of value chain.
- Inspection scheme: On the basis of the provided control plans the test sequences for the Sicherstellung of the quality by supplies and for the monitoring of production are planned.
The instruments of the quality specification are well-known as quality methods.