Search
Filters
Close

Save 20% on select best sellers with code MONSTER24Shop The Sale Now

In-process Quality Control and Quality Assurance Coatings Inspection: Redundant or Complementary Roles?

Everyone wants a quality project; the word quality means different things to different people. Owners have unique perspectives on quality and risk tolerance which often differs across industries. The owner of a trash recycling center looking to paint the walls of his loading dock has a different perspective than the owner of a nuclear power plant, looking at the coating systems applied on the interior of his primary containment walls.

Product Number: 51323-19006-SG
Author: Chris Kucherawy, Kimmer Cline, Lake Barrett
Publication Date: 2023
$0.00
$20.00
$20.00

The AMPP Contractor Certification Programs (e.g., AMPP-QP 1) and many project specifications prepared by public agencies and private companies require the painting contractor to control the quality of their work by providing a full time trained/certified quality control (QC) inspector on a coatings project. The role of the quality control inspector is to verify conformance to the governing specification using in-process inspection procedures, visual guides, test kits, and instrumentation, including documentation. Additionally, the facility owner may elect to contract with a third-party coating inspection firm to perform quality assurance (QA) inspection on the same coatings project (or assign a member of their staff to assure quality). The QA inspector often conducts the same inspections as the QC inspector. This paper and presentation will explore whether the roles of a QC and QA inspector on the same project are redundant or complementary. Examples of how, together, these roles have thwarted potential coating performance issues in the Chemical Processing environment will be cited.

The AMPP Contractor Certification Programs (e.g., AMPP-QP 1) and many project specifications prepared by public agencies and private companies require the painting contractor to control the quality of their work by providing a full time trained/certified quality control (QC) inspector on a coatings project. The role of the quality control inspector is to verify conformance to the governing specification using in-process inspection procedures, visual guides, test kits, and instrumentation, including documentation. Additionally, the facility owner may elect to contract with a third-party coating inspection firm to perform quality assurance (QA) inspection on the same coatings project (or assign a member of their staff to assure quality). The QA inspector often conducts the same inspections as the QC inspector. This paper and presentation will explore whether the roles of a QC and QA inspector on the same project are redundant or complementary. Examples of how, together, these roles have thwarted potential coating performance issues in the Chemical Processing environment will be cited.

Also Purchased
Picture for 00611 COATING INSPECTION, WHAT'S CHANGED?
Available for download

00611 COATING INSPECTION, WHAT'S CHANGED?

Product Number: 51300-00611-SG
ISBN: 00611 2000 CP
Author: STEPHEN G. PINNEY, P.E.
$20.00