In Work
New parts and new part revisions are created in the In Work state. A
part's name may be automatically generated or calculated by the user. In either
case the Create Part or Revise Part pages are used to generate the part and
connect it to the appropriate ECO and drawing print objects.
Once a part is created, the Bill of Materials page is used to build
its Bill of Materials, a comprehensive definition of materials (and their
effectivity dates) required to manufacture the product. The user can also copy
another part's Bill of Materials by using the Copy EBOM command link. Drawing
print objects are created and attached to the part as required during this step
in the process.
Once the owner of the part has completed building the Bill of
Materials and connecting the appropriate drawing prints, the owner promotes the
object to the Frozen state.
Because of the following checks, the user is required to promote the
part from the bottom up. That is, the drawing prints must be promoted before
their respective parts and the components must be promoted before their
respective assemblies.
As the part leaves the In Work state, the following checks are fired:
- All component parts attached via the EBOM relationship ("From"
direction) must be at or beyond the Frozen state.
- All drawings attached via the Part Specification relationship must
be at or beyond the Frozen state.
- The part must be connected to an ECO via the ECO New Part Revision
relationship.
- All earlier revisions of this part must be at or beyond the Release
state.
- All component parts attached via the EBOM relationship ("From"
direction) must be the Latest Released Revision of that part.
- At least one Part Specification connection must exist regardless of
the object type related. The object type can be a drawing print, CAD model, CAD
drawing or any other type added to the Part Specification relationship.
- The related document must have at least one file checked in.
- At least one Design Responsibility connection must
exist regardless of the object type related. Design Responsibility can be
assigned only to organizations (subsidiaries, business units, or departments)
within the host company.
If all of these checks pass, the part will be promoted to the next
state.
Frozen
The part is reviewed and approved in this state by the Responsible
Manufacturing Engineer using the ECO Properties page. The review should include
the parts attributes, bill of materials, and drawing print.
The Responsible Manufacturing Engineer makes adjustments to attributes
like Effectivity and Estimated Cost as necessary. The permissions in this state
do not allow any relationships below this part to be made or broken.
Once the Responsible Manufacturing Engineer is satisfied that the part
can be manufactured consistent with its intent, s/he promotes it to the Release
state.
Because of the following checks, the user is required to promote the
parts from the bottom up.
As the part leaves the Frozen state, the following checks are fired:
- All component parts attached via the EBOM relationship ("From"
direction) must be at or beyond the Release state.
- All drawings attached via the Part Specification relationship must
be at or beyond the Release state.
- If there are one or more manufacturer equivalent parts connected,
at least one must be in the Release state.
If these checks pass, the part will be promoted to the next state.
Approved
After the part enters the Approved state, all proposed changes
connected to the part's ECO are checked to see if they are also in the Approved
state. If all proposed changes are in the Approved state, the ECO is
automatically promoted to the Review state. If any single proposed change
connected to the ECO is in a state prior to Approved, the ECO is not promoted
to the Review state.
A trigger is available (but is inactive, by default) to block ECO
proposed changes from being promoted to the Release state unless the connected
ECO is already in the Release state.
If a part has equivalent parts connected to it, one or more of the
equivalent parts must be in the Release state before this part can be promoted
to Release.
Released
The Compliance or Component Engineer is responsible for promoting
manufacturer equivalent parts to the Release state when the part definition is
complete. When an equivalent part is promoted to this state, connections are
maintained to the last released and/or in process revisions of its enterprise
part, and history connections are maintained to the previous enterprise part.
This is handled by the release state action trigger.
The Manufacturer Equivalent History relationship accommodates this
delayed float logic. This relationship has all the same attributes as the
Manufacturer Equivalent relationship. Both of these relationships have the
attributes Start Effectivity Date and End Effectivity
Date.
On the initial connection of a manufacturer equivalent part, the Start
Effectivity Date and End Effectivity Date on the manufacturer equivalent part
are both blank. It is not until the enterprise part is promoted to the Release
state that the Start Effectivity Date is set to the released date of the
enterprise part.
As a part enters the Release state, the following action fires:
- When an enterprise part is released, the Start Effectivity Date on
the Manufacturer Equivalent relationships between this enterprise part and the
equivalent part is set to the released date of this enterprise part.
If the part that is being released is determined to be an equivalence
part, then the following actions are performed:
- If the Manufacturer Equivalent connection is from the highest
release of an enterprise part, the following steps are performed:
- An identical Manufacturer Equivalent History relationship is
created between the parts. This connection has all the same attribute values as
the Manufacturer Equivalent connection.
- The End Effectivity Date is set on the Manufacturer Equivalent
History connection to the date the equivalent part is released minus 1 second.
(The subtraction of 1 second is so that the end effectivity date on the
Manufacturer Equivalent History connection is not identical to the start
effectivity date on the Manufacturer Equivalent connection)
- The Manufacturer Equivalent connection is floated to the newly
released equivalent part.
- The Start Effectivity Date on the Manufacturer Equivalent
connection is set to the date the equivalent part is released.
- The End Effectivity Date on the Manufacturer Equivalent
connection is kept blank (no end effectivity date since this is the last
released revision)
- If the Manufacturer Equivalent connection is from an in-process
enterprise part, then the Manufacturer Equivalent relationship is floated to
the newly released equivalent part. There is no need for a Manufacturer
Equivalent History connection here.
- If the Manufacturer Equivalent connection is from a previous
release of an enterprise part (previous to the latest released revision), then
the Manufacturer Equivalent connection is left as is. There is no need for a
Manufacturer Equivalent History connection here.
Pending Obsolete
A manufacturer equivalent part is not always promoted directly from
Release to Obsolete. In many cases, the OEM gets information from the supplier
or a manufacturer a few weeks or months before the MEP is definitely removed
from their catalog. The OEM needs to capture this information as soon as
possible.
The MEP cannot be kept in the Release state since it should not be
used for any new design, but it cannot be promoted to Obsolete since it can
still be used in production.
Until its effective obsolescence date, it can be promoted to the
Pending Obsolete state.
The MEP promotion from Release to Pending Obsolete would be triggered
by the Obsolete request right after its creation.
The MEP promotion from Pending Obsolete to Obsolete would be triggered
by the Obsolete request when it is promoted to Complete.
Obsolete
As a part enters the Obsolete state, the following action fires:
- When a equivalent part is promoted to Obsolete, a trigger sets the
End Effectivity Date on the Manufacturer Equivalent relationship between that
part and its enterprise part to the date this part enters the Obsolete state.
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