Kit Certification: Difference between revisions

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OSE kit certification is a certification for OSE Kits for any producer who would like to make kits to OSE specifications. The first kit produced by OSE is the 3D printer kit - for OSE's [[3D Printer v18.10]] - the official 3D printer release from 2018.
OSE kit certification is a certification for OSE Kits for any producer who would like to make kits to OSE specifications. The first kit produced by OSE is the 3D printer kit - for OSE's [[3D Printer v18.10]] - the official 3D printer release from 2018.


=Certification=
=Certification Process Overview=
To produce the 3D Printer kit, one must be able to do the following steps:
To produce the 3D Printer kit, one must be able to do the following steps:


#Source materials from the [[3D Printer BOM]]
#Source materials from the [[3D Printer BOM]]
#From sourced materials, preparing a complete and tested kit sufficient for building one D3D v18.10 3D printer completely.
#Package the kit and ship to the customer
=Individual Kit Certification=
The ability to prepare a kit from sourced materials must be done effectively and efficiently in order for that to become a scalable and economically significant product. OSE is testing whether distributed production of kits is a viable business model, including proper quality control. Distributed quality control can be achieved by a combination of easy-to-source off-the-shelf parts, reliable sourcing, simple design, and quality control checklists. OSE is testing not only the viability of distributed kit production - but also - of distributed quality control.
Distributed quality control begins with kit producers demonstrating the ability to produce, test, and document their kit. Certification may be done on the OSE premises on an appointment basis - or the Certification Data may be submitted remotely via the internet.
To certify a kit, the producer builds the kit from parts, and submits necessary documentation. The submission would be pictures, answers to key build quetions, checklists, and some written notes on the wiki. The documentation part will require 1-2 hours to record/embed pictures on the wiki, in addition to the actual kit preparation.
For anyone to get certified to build kits, the best place to get training is during OSE's [[Immersion Training Program]].
I am preparing the Kit Certifiation Protocol, ie - what to submit and checklists etc.
Ideally, you would do the exam on Wednesday - and for Alex it may be a partial exam unless you can print all your parts yourself - since Sara is doing the printing now. For which reason it is important that Alex gets to run his printers as soon as possible. And on top of that - ideally we would do the build certification on Friday before the actual build of Oct 27.  If there are no paid registrations on the 27th, then your Certified printers can be disassembled and put back together during the Saturday workshop. If there are paying customers for the 27th, then Friday it would be difficult to do the Build Certification - as you would need to prepare 2 kits for the 27th - unless you can prepare more than 1 kit for your Kit Certification so you can have all the kits in place for the 27th, and still be able to do the Build Certification prior to the 27th. Or, you can disassemble your printers for Build Day and people take them home - but that would mean an extra build that you would still have to do for your 3rd printers. We need to get started on Filament Maker and shredder parts asap - plus some of the small tools described in my package shipping email.
In both cases of Kit + Build Certification, the certification would be represented by a percentage score based on well-defined criteria recorded on a checklist - so there is no ambiguity on what the grading actually means. Thus, we can create a transparent certification where everyone understands clearly the level of competency achieved. This can be both an educational and aspirational process for all of the OSE community - and especially useful to those people who are considering starting their own microfactories.
What are your thoughts on Wednesday and Friday?

Revision as of 01:55, 22 October 2018

Introduction

OSE kit certification is a certification for OSE Kits for any producer who would like to make kits to OSE specifications. The first kit produced by OSE is the 3D printer kit - for OSE's 3D Printer v18.10 - the official 3D printer release from 2018.

Certification Process Overview

To produce the 3D Printer kit, one must be able to do the following steps:

  1. Source materials from the 3D Printer BOM
  2. From sourced materials, preparing a complete and tested kit sufficient for building one D3D v18.10 3D printer completely.
  3. Package the kit and ship to the customer

Individual Kit Certification

The ability to prepare a kit from sourced materials must be done effectively and efficiently in order for that to become a scalable and economically significant product. OSE is testing whether distributed production of kits is a viable business model, including proper quality control. Distributed quality control can be achieved by a combination of easy-to-source off-the-shelf parts, reliable sourcing, simple design, and quality control checklists. OSE is testing not only the viability of distributed kit production - but also - of distributed quality control.

Distributed quality control begins with kit producers demonstrating the ability to produce, test, and document their kit. Certification may be done on the OSE premises on an appointment basis - or the Certification Data may be submitted remotely via the internet.

To certify a kit, the producer builds the kit from parts, and submits necessary documentation. The submission would be pictures, answers to key build quetions, checklists, and some written notes on the wiki. The documentation part will require 1-2 hours to record/embed pictures on the wiki, in addition to the actual kit preparation.

For anyone to get certified to build kits, the best place to get training is during OSE's Immersion Training Program.

I am preparing the Kit Certifiation Protocol, ie - what to submit and checklists etc.

Ideally, you would do the exam on Wednesday - and for Alex it may be a partial exam unless you can print all your parts yourself - since Sara is doing the printing now. For which reason it is important that Alex gets to run his printers as soon as possible. And on top of that - ideally we would do the build certification on Friday before the actual build of Oct 27. If there are no paid registrations on the 27th, then your Certified printers can be disassembled and put back together during the Saturday workshop. If there are paying customers for the 27th, then Friday it would be difficult to do the Build Certification - as you would need to prepare 2 kits for the 27th - unless you can prepare more than 1 kit for your Kit Certification so you can have all the kits in place for the 27th, and still be able to do the Build Certification prior to the 27th. Or, you can disassemble your printers for Build Day and people take them home - but that would mean an extra build that you would still have to do for your 3rd printers. We need to get started on Filament Maker and shredder parts asap - plus some of the small tools described in my package shipping email.

In both cases of Kit + Build Certification, the certification would be represented by a percentage score based on well-defined criteria recorded on a checklist - so there is no ambiguity on what the grading actually means. Thus, we can create a transparent certification where everyone understands clearly the level of competency achieved. This can be both an educational and aspirational process for all of the OSE community - and especially useful to those people who are considering starting their own microfactories.

What are your thoughts on Wednesday and Friday?