For contract manufacturers,
Unless expectations/requirements are particularly specified by customers OR there is a discussion and contract in place, what are the expectations when it comes to the assembly standards and practices? Is J-STD essentially just a standard to ideally implement, but unless specifically referred to/requested by the end user, then technically is the MFG required to follow any of these? (though of course, not doing this would be poor practice and not recommended...)
To expand: if for example a customer requested assemblies but never specified their requirements, would MFGs be expected/required to follow parameters from a specific class related to the end use of said product?
Or would this leave it completely open and become a judgment call by the MFG? If let's say you are inspecting the boards to class 2 (but not specified by customer, but based on end use/cost of failure/typical cases) but since the assembly isn't technically specified as class 2, would passing a joint that's only class 1 technically be allowed? Where would the line be drawn?
Same for cleaning (among other things): if the customer never specifies cleaning requirements/expectations, then at what point would you be cleaning too much? What about not enough? What even is the definition of clean if it's not being specified/references, as arguably the end customer may just be visually requesting.
Overall, how does a MFG determine requirements for assemblies when customer doesn't specify? As typically, most customers we see just want an assembled board and don't have any information regarding inspection/assembly/expectation requirements, so what is to be followed?
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