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Quality Inspection & Assurance: Basic Briefing

This document provides an overview of quality inspection and assurance. It defines the key differences between quality control and quality assurance. Quality assurance is focused on planning and documenting processes to ensure quality, while quality control is the physical verification that a product meets these quality plans through inspection and measurement. Some common quality management tools are also listed such as ISO 9000 standards, 5S, Kaizen, failure mode effect analysis, and quality control circles. Planning, implementation, evaluation, assessment, and review are identified as the fundamental aspects of quality inspection and assurance systems.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
62 views12 pages

Quality Inspection & Assurance: Basic Briefing

This document provides an overview of quality inspection and assurance. It defines the key differences between quality control and quality assurance. Quality assurance is focused on planning and documenting processes to ensure quality, while quality control is the physical verification that a product meets these quality plans through inspection and measurement. Some common quality management tools are also listed such as ISO 9000 standards, 5S, Kaizen, failure mode effect analysis, and quality control circles. Planning, implementation, evaluation, assessment, and review are identified as the fundamental aspects of quality inspection and assurance systems.
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Basic Briefing

Quality Inspection & Assurance


• Fundamental Principles of Quality Inspection &
Assurance.
• Statistical Quality Controls Application Tools.
• ISO 9000-2008.
• Quality Management Tools 5S, Kaizen.
• Performance Management Through Audit &
Inspection .
• Nonconformities Reporting & Corrective Actions.
Distinguish B/w Quality Control & Assurance
•Quality Assurance is defined as
“All the planned and systematic activities implemented within the quality system that can
be demonstrated to provide confidence that a product or service will fulfill requirements
for quality”.
•Quality Control is defined as
“The operational techniques and activities used to fulfill requirements for quality”.

•Quality Assurance is fundamentally focused on planning and documenting those


processes to assure quality including things such as quality plans and inspection and test
plans
•Quality Control on the other hand is the physical verification that the product conforms
to these planned arrangements by inspection, measurement

•Quality Assurance is a system for evaluating performance, Service, of the quality of a


product against a system, standard or specified requirement for customers.
•Quality Control is the process involved within the system to ensure job management,
competence and performance during the manufacturing of the product or service to
ensure it meets the quality plan as designed.
Quality Control Quality Assurance
1. Product □ Process
1. Reactive □ Pro-Active
1. Line Function □ Staff Function
1. Find the Defects □ Prevent the Defects

1. Walk Through □ Quality Audit


1. Testing □ Defining Process
1. Inspection □ Selection of Tools
1. Checkpoint Review □ Trainings
Fundamentals of Quality Inspection & Assurance

Planning Impleme
ntation

Evaluati
on &
Assessm
ent
Planning

Clear Goals Procedure


Regarding
Policies s

Task & Human Input &


Resource Output
Implementation

Through Rules Funding


& Regulation Incentives

Training & Internal


Development Quality System
Evaluation &
Assessment

scope of areas for


evaluations improvement

Recommendati
ons for action
Review

Revision of Fine-tuning of
quality
planning objectives

Quality
management
activities
Quality Inspection & Assurance

Failure Mode Effect Analysis


Quality Control Circle

ABC Management

Value Stream Mapping

Out of Control Action Plan


THE QUALITY ASSURANCE STANDARDS:
♦ in 1987 respected industry
representatives from around the globe
assisted the International Standards
Organization (ISO) to develop the ISO
9000 series of quality system
standards.

♦ These standards have been


recognized and are in use in over 90
countries including the United Kingdom,
the European Community

The 2 most commonly used standards in the ISO 9000 series are ISO 9001
and ISO 9002:
ISO 9001 sets out the requirements to be met by the Quality System when a
business is involved in design, development, production, and installation and/or
servicing.
ISO 9002 sets out the requirements of the QA system when a business is involved
in development, production, and installation and/or servicing.
As you can see, the only difference between the 2 standards is the
"Design" element.

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