Acceptance Tests – FAT & SAT : An Empirical Case Study of Utility Poles

The overall purpose of this project is to devise improved quality acceptance procedures to examine quality characteristics of utility poles at the factory of the supplier (FAT) and on-site upon receipt by the customer (SAT). To that end, the thesis draws upon available standards, literature, and ind...

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Main Author: Al Farra, Hussni
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Linköpings universitet, Logistik- och kvalitetsutveckling 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-132288
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-liu-1322882016-11-03T05:09:35ZAcceptance Tests – FAT & SAT : An Empirical Case Study of Utility PolesengAl Farra, HussniLinköpings universitet, Logistik- och kvalitetsutveckling2016Factory acceptance testquality controlquality inspectionutility polesquality managementThe overall purpose of this project is to devise improved quality acceptance procedures to examine quality characteristics of utility poles at the factory of the supplier (FAT) and on-site upon receipt by the customer (SAT). To that end, the thesis draws upon available standards, literature, and industry practices regarding wood, fiberglass and steel poles. As far as the design of the research, a single case study of a major power company was chosen. Then, a data collection plan was developed in order to build upon the existing knowledge found in the literature, and upon the data that can be collected from three of the Company’s suppliers, in addition to the Technical Research Institute of Sweden (SP). Documents’ analysis, interviews, observations, and a survey were the tools of that plan. It was found that criteria, inspection and test methods of wood poles are all sufficiently covered in the standards and the literature; for wood is the most commonly used material for utility poles. Next, in coverage of research, are the steel poles; while there is currently no standard that covers fiberglass utility poles. Indeed, quality characteristics, criteria, and acceptance procedures can altogether form parts of a sustainable solution, as long as the quality is managed as a process whether at the Company’s end or at the fabrication sites; that is especially true if there is some form of backward partnership between the Company and its suppliers. Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-132288application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Factory acceptance test
quality control
quality inspection
utility poles
quality management
spellingShingle Factory acceptance test
quality control
quality inspection
utility poles
quality management
Al Farra, Hussni
Acceptance Tests – FAT & SAT : An Empirical Case Study of Utility Poles
description The overall purpose of this project is to devise improved quality acceptance procedures to examine quality characteristics of utility poles at the factory of the supplier (FAT) and on-site upon receipt by the customer (SAT). To that end, the thesis draws upon available standards, literature, and industry practices regarding wood, fiberglass and steel poles. As far as the design of the research, a single case study of a major power company was chosen. Then, a data collection plan was developed in order to build upon the existing knowledge found in the literature, and upon the data that can be collected from three of the Company’s suppliers, in addition to the Technical Research Institute of Sweden (SP). Documents’ analysis, interviews, observations, and a survey were the tools of that plan. It was found that criteria, inspection and test methods of wood poles are all sufficiently covered in the standards and the literature; for wood is the most commonly used material for utility poles. Next, in coverage of research, are the steel poles; while there is currently no standard that covers fiberglass utility poles. Indeed, quality characteristics, criteria, and acceptance procedures can altogether form parts of a sustainable solution, as long as the quality is managed as a process whether at the Company’s end or at the fabrication sites; that is especially true if there is some form of backward partnership between the Company and its suppliers.
author Al Farra, Hussni
author_facet Al Farra, Hussni
author_sort Al Farra, Hussni
title Acceptance Tests – FAT & SAT : An Empirical Case Study of Utility Poles
title_short Acceptance Tests – FAT & SAT : An Empirical Case Study of Utility Poles
title_full Acceptance Tests – FAT & SAT : An Empirical Case Study of Utility Poles
title_fullStr Acceptance Tests – FAT & SAT : An Empirical Case Study of Utility Poles
title_full_unstemmed Acceptance Tests – FAT & SAT : An Empirical Case Study of Utility Poles
title_sort acceptance tests – fat & sat : an empirical case study of utility poles
publisher Linköpings universitet, Logistik- och kvalitetsutveckling
publishDate 2016
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-132288
work_keys_str_mv AT alfarrahussni acceptancetestsfatampsatanempiricalcasestudyofutilitypoles
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