Assembling of Material* 175 



following the work from place to place, at may be 

 necessary, gauging the parts as they come from 

 the ; .ether it is better to have the 



inspectors go to the work or the work go to the 

 inspectors will be governed by condition!. 



s obvious that rejected work should be 

 promptly segregated from the good material and 

 rcmmrj from all possibility of becoming mixed 



:th the rest of the product. 

 Too much stress can hardly be laid on the im- 

 portance of a healthy relationship between the 

 foreman and inspection. The situation is deadly 

 where the foreman is trying to "slip it over*' the 

 inspector and the inspector is 4t laying for 11 the 

 foreman or workman. This may be a great game, 

 but it is played at the expense of production, and 

 the business suffers. Where production and in- 

 spection are each doing clean, honest, effective 

 work, they are a mutual help, and there is an 

 output which is a credit to all concerned. 



Section IV 

 Assembling of Materials 



The Trinity of Material Requirements. The 

 trinity of material requirements the "u/; 

 "u//rvr," and "in the condition," you want it is 

 particularly applicable to the assembling of a 

 product. It is essential that all the parts needed 

 in assembly arrive at the same time at the place 

 where they are to be put together. If one part 

 king, all the other parts must be laid aside 



