Current Content
(2)(i) In preparing instructions for Government inspections, the technical activity shall consider, as applicable—
(A) The past quality history of the contractor;
(B) The criticality of the material procured in relation to its intended use, considering factors such as—
(1) Reliability;
(2) Safety;
(3) Interchangeability; and
(4) Maintainability;
(C) Problems encountered in the development of the material;
(D) Problems encountered in other procurements of the same or similar material;
(E) Available feedback data from contract administration, receiving, testing, or using activities; and
(F) The experience of other contractors in overcoming manufacturing problems.
(ii) The instructions shall—
(A) Be kept to a minimum;
(B) Ensure that the activities requested are in direct relation to contract quality requirements to serve as objective evidence of quality conformance; and
(C) Be prepared on a contract-by-contract basis.
(iii) The instructions shall not—
(A) Serve as a substitute for incomplete contract quality requirements;
(B) Impose greater inspection requirements than are in the contract;
(C) Use broad or general designations such as—
(1) All requirements;
(2) All characteristics; or
(3) All characteristics in the classification of defects;
(D) Be used for routine administrative procedures; or
(E) Specify continued inspection requirements when statistically sound sampling will provide an adequate degree of protection.
(iv) After issuing the instructions, the technical activity must—
(A) Provide the contract administration office with available information regarding those factors that resulted in the requirement for Government inspection;
(B) Periodically analyze the need to continue, change, or discontinue the instructions; and
(C) Advise the contract administration office of the results of the periodic analyses.
Change History
| Detected | Type | Summary |
|---|---|---|
| detected 2026-04-17 | PGI_MODIFIED | PGI 246.103 updated: 12 lines added, 3 lines removed |
View diff--- previous +++ current @@ -1,3 +1,18 @@ -(1) The contracting office must coordinate with the quality assurance activity before changing any quality requirement. -(2) The activity responsible for technical requirements may prepare instructions covering the type and extent of Government inspections for acquisitions that are complex, have critical applications, or have unusual requirements. Follow the procedures at PGI 246.103 -(2) for preparation of instructions.+(2)(i) In preparing instructions for Government inspections, the technical activity shall consider, as applicable-- (A) The past quality history of the contractor; (B) The criticality of the material procured in relation to its intended use, considering factors such as-- + +(1) Reliability; + +(2) Safety; + +(3) Interchangeability; and + +(4) Maintainability; (C) Problems encountered in the development of the material; (D) Problems encountered in other procurements of the same or similar material; (E) Available feedback data from contract administration, receiving, testing, or using activities; and (F) The experience of other contractors in overcoming manufacturing problems. +(ii) The instructions shall-- (A) Be kept to a minimum; (B) Ensure that the activities requested are in direct relation to contract quality requirements to serve as objective evidence of quality conformance; and (C) Be prepared on a contract-by-contract basis. +(iii) The instructions shall not-- (A) Serve as a substitute for incomplete contract quality requirements; (B) Impose greater inspection requirements than are in the contract; (C) Use broad or general designations such as-- + +(1) All requirements; + +(2) All characteristics; or + +(3) All characteristics in the classification of defects; (D) Be used for routine administrative procedures; or (E) Specify continued inspection requirements when statistically sound sampling will provide an adequate degree of protection. +(iv) After issuing the instructions, the technical activity must-- (A) Provide the contract administration office with available information regarding those factors that resulted in the requirement for Government inspection; (B) Periodically analyze the need to continue, change, or discontinue the instructions; and (C) Advise the contract administration office of the results of the periodic analyses. |
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