New UKAS Branding Heralds NAMAS Demise
15 January 1999
The British accreditation
agency has published details of the logo-types to be used by accredited
organizations and which must replace use of the existing NAMAS and
NACB marks by the end of the year 2000. The NAMAS acronym referred
to the agency's name until 1995, but the logo continued to be used
on testing/calibration reports which are widely known by industry
as "NAMAS certificates".
So, if your quality manual explicitly calls
for provision of this particular flavor of service from your suppliers,
be warned that officially they'll soon be unavailable. The labs
will probably know what you mean though.... we still hear of requests
for "BCS certificates", which disappeared in 1985 !
The relevant logo that will soon appear
on our (UK) calibration certificates is visually similar to the
old NAMAS logo -- see our UKAS page for more detail.
EU-US Trade Agreement on Metric Labeling
01 February 1999
The European Union had scheduled to shortly outlaw
any mention of non-metric measures (earlier story). However, the
November 1998 meeting of the Trans-Atlantic Business Dialogue (TABD)
resulted in the following conclusion:
[Extracted from the meeting summary published on the European
Commission website]
"TABD urges a 10-year deferral of the metric-only requirement
in the European Union in order to prevent imposing additional
costs on industry and to eliminate regulatory uncertainty. We
call on both Governments to use this time to work with industry
to pursue a permanent solution that will eliminate the current
incompatibility of the US and EU product labeling regimes. This
means equivalent action in the US and EU to amend their respective
labeling laws to accommodate both metric-only labeling and dual
units of measurement labeling Once the incompatibility of the
two systems is eliminated the market should decide when supplemental
units of measurement are necessary and when metric-only is sufficient."
Of course, the politicians will need to ratify the agreement but
it seems likely that we can safely continue to use those customary,
imperial units without fear of prosecution... or is it persecution
?
"Big 3" Car Makers Push for Guide 25
Compliance
...And Cause Controversy
15 February 1999
The third edition of QS9000
(the quality management standard jointly developed for the automotive
industry by Ford, General Motors and Daimler-Chrysler) has already
triggered concern in the test/calibration market, just a few weeks
after coming into effect on January 1st 1999. Clause
4-11-2 urges that such suppliers be ISO/IEC Guide 25 accredited
but acknowledges that services may not be available and defines
acceptable alternatives. One is for the supplier to be appraised
against that criteria by an organization recognized by the auto-manufacturer,
such as a quality system certifier. Although this is a matter between
the supplier and manufacturer concerned, such is the scale of the
automotive business that outraged "accreditationalists"
are predicting that phrases such as "ISO/IEC Guide 25 certified"
or even "registered" will become widespread in promotional
material as labs strive to differentiate themselves from their competitors.
They warn of market confusion as buyers ponder the difference between accredited and certified / registered labs..
Principally, Guide 25 is a quality management standard focused on
testing and, within that scope, quality system registrars are certainly
capable of checking compliance. But to be accredited to make specified
measurements requires assessment of technical competence which,
it is argued, goes beyond the registrars' knowledge. It's a matter
of conjecture whether this development is a radical reform of restrictive
bureaucracy through self-policing, or a step towards industrial
anarchy where the most powerful customers in the marketplace dictate
the rules... wasn't it always that way ?
It's noteworthy that QS9000
calls for use of accredited suppliers but, significantly, this doesn't
necessarily mean that the actual service is provided under the terms
of the accreditation. Genuine, accredited measurements are generally
recognized as authentic if reported on a certificate bearing the
brand-mark of the accreditation agency.
"Luddites" Relax as LORAN-C gets Extension
15 April 1999
Plans to extinguish the
terrestrialy-based radio navigation system, that some die-hards
continue to use as a frequency and time metrology reference despite
the availability of superior GPS equipment, have been shelved. The
worldwide transmission was expected to be discontinued at the turn
of the millennium but the US Secretary of Transportation has now
authorized its maintenance until 2008.
- Did You Know...?
The original Luddites were organized
bands of nineteenth century English handicraftsmen who rioted for
the destruction of the textile machinery that was replacing their
jobs in factories. The term is now used colloquially to describe
anyone averse to technological advances.
ISO/IEC FDIS17025 Ready for International Vote
15 May 1999
Following general consensus
of the WG10 committee, the final draft (dated April 20 1999) has
been published and has been distributed throughout industry and
its representatives. Contact your region's standards body or your
trade association to get one. We now enter the "end-game";
the FDIS will now be presented to ISO's international members for
a simple yes/no vote during the third quarter of the year. It's
expected to be approved and published, to a largely unsuspecting
world, before 2000.
- And Finally...
Thinking about the year 2000, trust the
computer industry to shorten the "Year 2000" problem to
"Y2k" -- that's the sort of thinking that led to the problem
in the first place !
Europe Announces "No Delay" to Metric
Law
...but you can safely ignore it !
23 June 1999
The mass resignation of the European Commissioners
earlier this year led to a work backlog and dashing the hopes of
many hoping for confirmation of a further 10 year implementation
delay (earlier story). In February the European Parliament decided
that this matter would not be treated as a priority and the following
crucial announcement was made at an 8th June 1999 meeting
of the EC Member States. Until the further ten year transition period
proposal is considered by the Parliament, the following situation
will remain:
- Use of metric only marking will effectively become
mandatory on 1st January 2000 but
- Member States have unanimously agreed not to prosecute
offenders but will not formally publicize this fact and
also
- The Commission will not prosecute Member States who
have not fully transposed the directive into their national legislation.
Swiss Company Aims to Oust UTC in Favor of "Internet
Time"
24 June 1999
Electronic watch manufacturer Swatch® is hoping for global adoption of a new timescale with its "Beat"
wristwatch promotion.
The turmoil of the French revolution is often cited as the birthplace
of metrication and, believe it or not, one of the less successful
campaigns of the age was for timekeeping to be metricized along
with the units of length and mass. The proposal was to split the
day into ten "new hours" of 100 "new minutes"
lasting 100 "new seconds", meaning that a "new second"
would have been 0.864 of the traditional period.
Of course it never caught on, proving that resistance to metrication
is nothing new.
However, Swatch clearly believe that the time is now right (!)
to revisit the issue and are marketing"Internet Time"
which divides the day into 1000 "beats", each lasting
the equivalent of 1 minute 26.4 seconds. Check their website and
decide for yourself whether Internet Time represents a serious threat
to Universal Co-ordinated Time (UTC) -- the existing "timescale
of choice" for most engineers and scientists.
Towards ISO9000:2000
15 August 1999
A Committee Draft version of the pre-eminent quality
management standard has been widely circulated for comment. When
eventually published, the new ISO9001 (which will be complemented
by a new 9004) will replace the current 9001, 9002 and 9003. November
1999 is the target date for release of the FDIS9001 which is the
formal version for ISO-member voting and the actual standard being
slated for publication one year later. A subcommittee of ISO's Technical
Committee 176 (responsible for ISO9000) is providing information
about this significant revision and advice on transition planning
(how to migrate from the 1994 version to the new standard).
FDIS17025 Voting Delay
15 September 1999
There has been some delay in language translation
and distribution of the official version for voting by the CASCO
membership. Although the English version of the final draft was
widely available in May, the distribution wasn't completed until
early September. The simple yes/no vote casting formalities are
understood to take place in mid-November and final publication as
ISO17025 seems unlikely before January-February 2000.
Everybody's Doing It
28 September 1999
Feeling a warm glow of self-satisfaction that
your company has been awarded an ISO9000 certificate? If you've
just told the marketing department to include the achievement as
a "Unique Selling Point", the results of ISO's latest
survey may cause you to reconsider. By the end of 1998, there were
almost 272,000 such registrations worldwide, an annual increase
of 22%.
Metrology Mix-up Muddles Mars Mission
20 October 1999
A classic confusion between metric and imperial
(English) measurement units has been reported as the probable cause
of the loss of the $125M Mars Climate Orbiter. The error led the
probe to fly too close to the red planet, causing the spacecraft
to burn up. It seems that a team at Lockheed Martin Astronautics
in Colorado submitted acceleration data in (imperial) pounds of
force whilst the navigation team at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
in California assumed the numbers were metric newtons. "It
was embedded in the system from the beginning,"' said Tom Gavin,
deputy director of JPL's space and Earth science program, "We're
still looking at why it was not detected."
Two Become One
29 November 1999
The next version of ISO9000 has apparently adopted
the sentiment of the famous Spice Girls song as two standards
become one.....
ISO has announced that Draft International Standard
(DIS) versions of the ISO9000 Year 2000 revisions were released
on 25 November, ready for international voting. This major update
to possibly the world's most cited standard includes consolidation
of ISO9002 and ISO9003 into ISO9001. There's a new ISO9004 too,
which provides guidance for quality system performance improvements.
The draft standards have been circulated for a 5-month vote to
ISOs member bodies the national standards institutes
of 90 countries. Assuming three-quarters of the votes cast favor
the DIS, they will go forward as Final Draft International Standards
(FDIS) for circulation to ISO member bodies in the third quarter
of 2000. Again, if 75% of the votes are positive, the new documents
will be published in the fourth quarter of 2000 as fully fledged
International Standards.
Database Aids Recognition of Traceability
9 December 1999
BIPM and NIST have cooperated in the establishment
of an Internet-accessible database that aims to facilitate recognition
of international traceability. The International Comparisons Database
lists the "measurement audits" that various countries'
national metrology institutes have participated in, those that are
currently underway and those that are planned. Its search facility
includes the option to show status of particular fields of metrology
or individual countries.
The results of such comparisons lead to Mutual Recognition Agreements
between the participating nations concerning the equivalence of
their respective national standards. That helps to remove technical
barriers to trade and should drive users' and conformity assessors'
acceptance of the validity of test results obtained in foreign countries.
British Premier Acts on Internet Time
30 December 1999
Prime Minister Tony Blair has committed his support
to the UK's proactive involvement in the development of the Internet
with the launch of Greenwich Electronic Time (GET) on January 1, 2000. The aim is to ensure that everyone conducting
business over the Internet uses the same timescale so that transactions
are clearly synchronized. Although e-mail messages and e-commerce
transactions already carry a "time stamp" based on Universal
Co-ordinated Time (the modern equivalent of Greenwich Mean Time),
most computer software converts this into local time (as defined
by the computer's own clock).
GET is being spearheaded by the Interactive Media in Retail Group
(IMRG), a European online retail body whose members include IBM,
Microsoft Corp, Marks & Spencer and the UK Post Office.
Mr Blair said he was "delighted that UK Industry has taken
the lead in building a key component of the emerging global electronic
marketplace. The GET website will turn GMT into a user-friendly
e-commerce tool. Because of the Greenwich connection, it will be
clearly branded as a UK service to global business, underlining
the leading role UK companies are playing in the online marketplace".
Earlier this year, fashionable Swiss watchmaker Swatch introduced
its "Beat" wristwatch which promoted an Internet timescale
centered on the Biel meridian and divides the day into 1,000 "beats"
of 1 minute 26.4 seconds. But IMRG project development manager Gareth
Donovan told The Times newspaper: "Everybody throughout the
world knows and understands what GMT is. Simply adding GET allows
people to extrapolate that intrinsic knowledge and trust into the
e-business and e-commerce environment."
Millennium Metric Martyrs
31 December 1999
Great Britain's traders must label and sell loose
goods using metric measures from January 1st,
2000 or face fines of up to 2000 pounds (money, not weight ! ).
Although dispensation was won from the European Union allowing imperial
(English) units also to be shown until 2010, many small businesses
are likely to fall foul of the legislation by failing to convert
weighing scales, dispensing pumps, etc..
Several newspapers have recently published articles which include
examples of such shopkeepers and tradesmen who are refusing to abide
by the legislation. Trading standards officials, led by the Department
of Trade and Industry, have confirmed that these "metric martyrs"
will be pursued through the courts. Meanwhile, the UK Independence
Party has pledged legal support to anyone facing prosecution. Their
spokesman Jeffrey Titford, who is a Member of the European Parliament
was quoted by the Daily Telegraph: "We understand the pressures
traders are under in facing this wicked legislation, which is attempting
to wipe out centuries of British culture and tradition. Some will
feel they have no option but to give way in the face of threats.
But for those who remain defiant we will give every possible back-up."
The only imperial measures that will still be legal for sales purposes
will be the pint for draught beer, cider and milk
in returnable bottles, the troy ounce for precious
metals, and the mile for road signs. |