Satisfying Today's Customer
About this Article
Mike Hutchins wrote and presented it at the British Electromagnetic
Measurements Conference in November 1995.
The Calibration Service Delivery Paradigm
Whoever said "Nothing changes" was wrong! We work in
a dynamic environment -- measurement equipment-users continually
press for improved support services in terms of product coverage,
business-ease, response-time and price (or at least value-for-money!).
Ten or even five years ago, target turnaround times (TAT) of fifteen
days were established as acceptable to the majority of our return-to-bench
customers. Today, TAT is no longer seen as an appropriate metric
for charting performance against customers' expectations. Order
fulfillment or on-time delivery-rate better measures our ability
to focus resources appropriately to match their needs. Nevertheless,
driven by demand, commitment times for job completion in the mid-nineties
are typically set at five days. However, an increasing number of
equipment-users will tolerate downtimes of just a few hours -- impossible
to satisfy using the traditional service delivery mechanism.
Who and Why?
The typical seeker of calibration services in Britain is no longer
in the defense business, as was the case ten or more years ago;
today's customer is likely to be directly or indirectly associated
with production of consumer-goods notably, for us, the "communications"
sector. "Time is money" could be the maxim best associated
with this market segment where production continuity is of the utmost
importance. Yet a large pool of in-storage equipment to facilitate
maintenance activity is an intolerable cost-burden. Further, the
difficulties of locating, extracting from test-racks and shipping
a lot of equipment to a remote calibration supplier and co-ordinating
the exercise can be a logistics nightmare. What better than to have
the calibration done on-site?

Traditional on-site calibration may not be
viable
Options
One solution is to equip an engineer to undertake the work in a
suitable area in the customer's facility. This type of service has
been available for many years but is restricted in the number and
product-range that, practically, can be supported. This limitation
can be overcome through assignment of more engineers, employing
a larger inventory of test gear, but the approach still requires
the customer to designate an area of adequate environmental control
for the work to be carried-out. Although modern factories often
provide suitable conditions for calibration, the pressure is to
utilize all available space in fulfillment of the manufacturer's
core competency; accommodation for a temporary calibration team
and their equipment is at a premium. Hence, the solution implemented
by Hewlett-Packard (Agilent Technologies) ; the mobile electrical
calibration laboratory.

Summarizing the evolution
The Facility in Summary
The laboratory is housed in a 13.8 metre (44ft) articulated trailer
with on-board environmental control (temperature/humidity/line voltage).
A separate cleaning/safety-test/warm-up area is located at the entrance.
The customer is responsible for providing a 3-phase, 63Amp electrical
supply outlet within 100 metres of the trailer's parking position.
On-board monitors maintain a record of the environment and even when
in-transit the laboratory is protected against low temperature extremes
by an integral, thermostatically-controlled, oil-burning heater.
It can contain up to eight configurable workstations, usually of
the automated variety, together with support equipment. The range
of test gear is dictated by the type of equipment to be calibrated.
Apart from items which are specifically dedicated to the trailer,
the resources of our Service Center are also made available where
feasible, resulting in a capability to calibrate almost the entire
spectrum of instruments of multivendor origin that could be tested
in the Center itself.
Regarding the support equipment, the ATE and record-keeping systems
are all linked to a local area network computer system which enables
utilization of the same (proprietary) software as used at our permanent
facility. Signals from an atomic (rubidium vapor) frequency standard
are also distributed.
Staffing is by engineers from our permanent laboratory who are
selected according to their familiarity with the products to be
calibrated and the equipment used. If NAMAS certification is required,
an approved signatory forms one of the team members. In principle,
the operation of the mobile lab. is the same as in-house so as to
achieve uniformity of work-process (procedures and methodology)
hence aiding staff undertaking the on-site activity and presenting
a consistent product to the customer, in terms of quality and extent
of service. However, in order to maximize engineering efficiency,
the consolidation of test results and certificates is completed
after the event at the main office for delivery to the customer
in bulk.
In addition to the normal sampling inspection activity, accuracy
confidence checks are made on selected items of test equipment prior
to and following transit and a formal record kept of the results.
Conclusion
The first "Volume, On-Site Calibration" (VOSCAL) event
completed using the mobile laboratory was in February this year
at which 1100 instruments, ranging in complexity from £150 handheld
multimeters to £60,000 communications analyzers, were calibrated
over 4 weeks. The service is attractive to those with large, production-critical
equipment inventories such as to employ the facility on-site for
1 to 6 weeks and has proved to be a very successful addition to
the portfolio of service-delivery options offered to our customers.
Although we have mobile/on-site operations in other countries, it
is currently the largest such facility -- and notably, has UKAS/NAMAS
category II accreditation which was assessed and granted during
that first VOSCAL!
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