QUALITY CONTROL. In
manufacturing, the organized effort to keep a product to a consistently high
set standard by testing it at various points during its production is called
quality control. Most products are made with a profit in mind, so the main
purpose of quality control is to maintain acceptable quality levels at the
lowest possible cost. A set of specifications is drawn up by the manufacturer,
or in some instances by a customer, and the company's activities aimed at
maintaining those standards all fall under the category of quality
control.
Tests
are applied at several points along the production line. It is usually not
economical to wait until the product is finished to make samplings: if
something is wrong at that point, a great deal of money and material have been
wasted. It is essential to have one or a number of in-process checks, depending
on the complexity of the product being manufactured. This process must be
tailored to the particular product, but it can include control of assembly and packaging
and study of field performance reports. After all operations are complete, a
test is made to ensure that the finished product meets the requirements. This
last check is known as quality assurance.
So-called acceptance sampling plans are used to determine if a product
should be allowed to proceed to the next step of manufacture, based on
requirements for a specified level of quality. The first part of such plans
concerns sample size, or the proportion of the material to be measured for
quality. If the sample is 100 percent of the lot, the test is called a detailed
inspection. If it is less than 100 percent, it is called a sampling
inspection.
Next,
the numbers used in the tests are compared to acceptable standards, and the
degree to which they vary from these standards is recorded. This latter, called
the decision variable, is used to determine whether or not the lot is
acceptable.
The
final part involves values based on the decision variable, or acceptance value,
that determines when a lot is acceptable. All sampling plans involve risk; in
order to eliminate all defective merchandise, it would be necessary to inspect
100 percent of the products, which nearly always would add greatly to the cost
of those products.
Quality
control is incorporated into a manufacturing organization in a variety of ways.
The department is set up to operate according to written regulations, with the
manager of quality control usually reporting to the top manufacturing
executive. Departmental function depends upon coordination--checking the
product in a series of organized tests--and concerns much more than the
finished product. Once the shipment goes to the customer, the staff members
receive and review reports on product performance. In a large operation they
also work with company engineers on ideas for improving the product. (See
also Industry, "Mass Production.") [1]
Hashim Ibrahim Filali
1. Comdata Observe (1-2), 1987H, 1988G - 1408H, 1409H
2. Comdata Coverage (1), 1988G - 1408H,1409H
3. Comdata Events (Information System), 1988G, 1989G - 1408H, 1409H
1410H
4. Catalogue 1996G by I.S. SDM; 1996g (Charts)
5. Education Activity and View Coverage; 1996g (Charts)
6. Regular Project..; 1996g
(Charts)
7. Challenge Task I (Business General Basics); 1996g
(Charts)
8. Challenge Task II (Understanding Data Processing); 1996g
(Charts)
9. Normal View and Check Coverage; 1996g (Charts)
10. Introduction to
Information Technology ( Real Life Business); 1996g
11. Business Concept and
View Points (Part I); 1996g
12. Business Concept and
View Points (Part II); 1996g
13. Marketing Strategy for
Success; 1996g
14. Basic Rules For
Information Management; 1996g
15. Organization
Management and Administration Coverage; 1996g (CT
iii)
16. An Entrance to Next
Century; 1996g (CT
vi)
17. Survival in Business
by an Easy Procedures; 1996g (CT
x)
18. Monitoring Project
Planning and Facilities Update; 1996g (CT xx)
19. Project’s Activities
and Related Tasks; 1996g
20. Join the Competition
and Win the Challenge; 1996g (CT
xxv)
21. Directions of
Management and Processing; 1996g (CT
xxx)
22. Productiveties
Improvement and Getting Update; 1996g (CT xxxv)
23. Culture Effect in
Marketing Business; 1996g (CT
xxxx)
24. Efficient Methods of
Management Administration; 1997g (CT xxxxx)
25. Creating Procedures to
Get Best Project Processing; 1997g (CT 100)
26. Meet the Changing
Demands in the Market; 1997g (Acceptance Package to the Customer) (CT
200)
27. Windows to the
business in the Market; 1997g (CT
222)
28. Sort of Existing
Business - 0X 1997g (Chart) (CT
999)
29. Access All the
Authorized Channels by an Ease
30. A little Moment in Management
(Information Technology Systems) 1997G
31. Major and Minor
Activities Coverage 1997G (CT
2000)
32. Way of Organizing the
work (Information Technology Systems)
1997G
33. Dealing Right to get
your Rights (I.T.) Industrial Engineering)
1998G
34. Simple Ways to
Project Activities 1998G
35. Packaging Systems and
Quality Packing (I.T. Industrial Engineering) 1998G
36. Academic and Non
Academic Business (Industrial Engineering)
1998G
37. SDM-IE Newsletters –01- 1998G-1999G
[1]Excerpted
from Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia Deluxe. Copyright © 1994, 1995,
1996, 1997 The Learning Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.