Glossary

FAI trigger

An FAI trigger is an event or change that requires a first article inspection to be performed or repeated.

An FAI trigger is an event, condition, or change that requires a first article inspection to be performed, updated, or repeated. In aerospace and other regulated manufacturing environments, it commonly refers to the circumstances that make a full or partial FAI necessary before production acceptance can proceed.

FAI triggers are often tied to changes in design, manufacturing method, tooling, location, supplier, materials, or a lapse in production. They may also arise after a significant nonconformance or corrective action when the affected characteristics need to be reverified.

The term is closely associated with AS9102 first article inspection practices, but it is not the same as the FAI report itself. The trigger is the reason an FAI activity is required; the FAI package or report is the documented evidence produced from that activity.

In MES, quality, PLM, or supplier portal workflows, FAI triggers may be represented as rules, approvals, or status changes that route parts for inspection and record review. For example, a revised drawing, a new production site, or a long production break may prompt a review to determine whether a new or partial FAI is needed.

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