No - but sense doesn't always seem to come into when working to ISO9000.
The
question is, does the standard explicitly state that we must uniquely
number
drawings, or can we use a generic numbering system for generic drawings? I
can see that we need to identify which project a drawing refers to, but
must
that be part of the drawing number or can it be a separate box in the
drawing template?
Gerry
"Cliff" <Clhuprich@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:14sag3h19jngv209l4sm2jdme1ltigvssr@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On Thu, 4 Oct 2007 16:39:35 +0100, "Gerard Farrell"
<gerard@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> wrote:
>
>>Hi,
>>
>>I have a general question about devising a numbering system for CAD
>>drawings. My engineer insists that every project we work on must have a
>>set
>>of unique drawing numbers, even if the drawing is one from a pool of
>>standard components. To me this seems counter-intuitive; if a drawing is
>>of
>>a standard part (albeit one that we get manufactured) then it would make
>>sense to me to leave the number unchanged. Otherwise we have 2 drawings
of
>>the same part that have different drawing numbers.
>>
>>Does ISO9000 state absolutely that drawing numbers must be unique, or is
>>my
>>engineer over-interpreting things?
>>
>>Thanks,
>>
>>Gerry
>
> If you had a standard bolt used many places on many projects
> would you get them from diferent suppliers & from different
> boxes?
> --
> Cliff


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