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Stamped Akụkụ onye na-ebubata Exit and Transition Checklist

Short answer: A akụkụ e kụrụ akara onye na-ebubata exit should control tooling, inspection fixtures, drawings, open purchase orders, inventory, quality records, certificates, packaging standards, and transition timing. Buyers should not wait until the relationship ends to confirm who owns the die, which files are current, and what evidence must move with the program.

onye na-ebubata exits happen for many reasons: quality problems, capacity limits, price changes, plant closure, commercial disputes, or dual-sourcing strategy. The risk is highest when tooling, fixtures, records, and inventory are not controlled before the transition starts.

Use this checklist with the onye na-ebubata transfer checklist, tool ownership transfer guide, inspection fixture guide, and backup onye na-ebubata qualification guide.

onye na-ebubata exit items to secure

Item Why it matters RFQ detail to confirm
Tooling and fixtures Production cannot transfer if assets are unclear or unavailable. Ownership, condition, storage, photos, calibration, spare parts, and release date.
Controlled technical files Old drawings create quote and approval mistakes. 2D drawing, 3D model, revision log, deviations, samples, and customer standards.
Inventory and open orders Exit timing can create shortages or obsolete stock. Finished goods, WIP, raw material, open PO, consignment, and last shipment plan.
Ogo and shipment records The Ọzọ onye na-ebubata needs historical risk data. FAI, PPAP, complaints, corrective actions, certificates, packing rules, and receiving issues.

Start with an asset list

List every die, fixture, gage, spare insert, strip layout, setup sheet, and special packaging asset tied to the part. Mark ownership, physical location, condition, asset ID, and whether transfer is allowed.

Photograph tooling and fixtures before movement. Photos help resolve disputes about condition, missing components, rust, storage damage, or incomplete spare sets.

Freeze the controlled drawing package

Before quoting a new source, confirm the current drawing revision, model, tolerance exceptions, open deviations, material, finish, inspection plan, and packaging standard. Do not rely on old onye na-ebubata notes as the only source of truth.

If the current onye na-ebubata has been making parts from informal clarifications, convert those decisions into a controlled package before sending the RFQ to a replacement onye na-ebubata.

This is also the right time to remove obsolete files from the package before quoting.

Protect supply during the transition window

onye na-ebubata exit is not only a tooling move. Buyers need enough finished goods, WIP, material, and approved shipment capacity to cover tool removal, transport, tryout, sample approval, and first production at the new source.

Use the capacity reservation guide and last-time-buy guide when exit timing affects service or production coverage.

If the current onye na-ebubata must keep shipping during qualification, define the overlap period and the minimum evidence required for each bridge shipment.

Move quality history with the program

A new onye na-ebubata should know which features have caused rejects, which dimensions are difficult to measure, which packaging failed, and which corrective actions are still relevant.

Provide approved samples, limit samples, gage correlation notes, material certificates, Nke gara aga complaints, and current inspection frequency. This shortens the learning curve and reduces repeated mistakes.

Define what the old onye na-ebubata must still support

Some exits still need final shipments, document copies, tool loading support, inventory reconciliation, certificate reissue, or corrective action closure. Put those obligations in writing before access becomes difficult.

If a commercial dispute exists, keep the technical transition record factual: asset list, dates, files, quantities, quality status, and release evidence.

RFQ details to include

Zipụ the replacement onye na-ebubata the controlled file package, asset status, tooling transfer plan, fixture data, demand bridge, current quality issues, packaging evidence, and required approval timeline.

Zipụ transition requirements through the kọntaktị page. Use the RFQ form to request transfer review, tooling tryout, and production launch assumptions.

Buyer file to keep with the quote

Keep this akụkụ e kụrụ akara onye na-ebubata exit and transition checklist with the drawing revision, quote number, onye na-ebubata assumptions, owner of each open action, and the latest approval record. That file helps future onye na-ebubata reviews, audits, reorders, and transition decisions stay consistent.

FAQ

What is the biggest risk in a onye na-ebubata exit?

The biggest risk is losing control of tooling, fixtures, drawings, inventory, and quality history before the replacement onye na-ebubata is ready.

Should buyers move tooling before approving a new source?

Not unless bridge inventory and approval timing are clear. Moving tooling too early can stop supply if tryout or sample approval takes longer than expected.

What records should move with the program?

Move current drawings, models, deviations, PPAP or FAI records, inspection plans, complaints, corrective actions, certificates, packaging rules, and approved samples.

How can buyers reduce transition disruption?

Start with asset control, freeze the technical package, build bridge inventory, qualify the new source, and keep shipment release rules clear during the overlap period.

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