Bearings must be hardened to a specific rockwell hardness and meet stringent specifications. Although Chinese companies seem to make a crappy knife steel (even for quality branded knives) which will not hold an edge, I have purchased China origin bearings and not had problems with them. Even brand name bearings now are manufactured in numerous countries other than the USA so brand seems to no longer matter as a purchasing guideline.
ISO 9001 is a joke. As head of Design and Documentation at the time, I was part of the implementation team when we went thru the ISO 9001 certification process.But the better China made bearings, even brand named, are built in ISO 9001 facilities and therefore have proper quality controls in place.
ISO 9001 is a joke. As head of Design and Documentation at the time, I was part of the implementation team when we went thru the ISO 9001 certification process.
ISO 9001 isn't about quality. It's all about having procedural documentation in place then following it to the T. If the procedure said to drill a hole in the wrong place, you drilled the hole in the wrong place or your out of compliance. If procedure called for a 50% rejection rate, you better have a 50% rejection rate or the auditor could failure you for non-compliance. Nothing but a big money making scheme.
International bearing information and specifications
http://www.astbearings.com/bearing-tolerances-precision-levels.html
Totally agree. It's only about documentation. You can make a crappy product and be ISO certified.ISO 9001 is a joke. As head of Design and Documentation at the time, I was part of the implementation team when we went thru the ISO 9001 certification process.
ISO 9001 isn't about quality.
Getting off topic, but don't agree that it's a money maker. Was in on most of them during history at DoD which included a large spot of CMM and others. Sure document how something was made, if it works you can repeat it, if it doesn't it needs to change. It cost a lot, but it beats the heck out of Mil-Spec
ISO systems merely gauge whether the processes are being followed. It does not gauge how good the processes are or whether the correct parameters are being measured and controlled to ensure quality. It is not unheard of for an ISO certified company to have poor quality performance due to poor process selection and/or poor technical solutions
Poor quality can often be tolerated.---But some industries / products can not tolerate it.--Know of a " high end " machine shop / factory locally.--Some drawing now have a note saying-----No material scourced from CHINA to be used in this product "--Too many instances where they say --" it is all the same " ---Many specialty alloys are foreign to these folks and money is money to them.
You misunderstood.----Some companies do not want their high end products custom made with iffy materials.---When I worked there one company supplied the specialty alloy as part of the contract, since it was not available in the regular market.
Reading thru all the ISO comments I had to stop a second because I was laughing so hard I spilled my beer. What makes matters even worse is that you are basically self policed.Totally agree. It's only about documentation. You can make a crappy product and be ISO certified.
OK, back off topic again.China is now the most industrialized country in the world and are willing to supply quality if you pay for it, or "iffy" if you want junk. China has built its empire by filling the demand for low cost junk AND reasonable priced high quality stuff.....it is consumer choice.