Glossary

Production-Intent Process

A production-intent process is the planned method intended for normal production, including equipment, tooling, controls, and work instructions.

A production-intent process is the planned and controlled manufacturing method intended to be used for normal production. It commonly includes the selected equipment, tooling, materials, routing, work instructions, operator methods, inspection approach, software records, and process controls that are expected to define the released production state.

In quality-sensitive manufacturing, the term is often used when determining whether a build, inspection, or qualification activity is representative of future production. For example, a first article inspection is typically expected to reflect the production-intent process rather than a prototype-only setup, unless the applicable customer, program, or internal process allows a different approach.

Production-intent does not always mean full-rate production or final approval of the process. It means the process is intended to match normal production conditions closely enough to make the resulting parts, data, and inspection evidence representative. If equipment, tooling, routing, or controls change later, those changes are commonly handled through the applicable change control, quality, or reinspection process.

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