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| MIL-S-3788G
6.3.1 Technical data
It should be specified in the "Remarks" section of
the DD Form 1423 that `all technical data ordered shall be written in the
English language.
6.4 First
article. When first article inspection is required,
the
contracting officer should provide specific guidance to offerors whether the
a first production item, or a
item(s)
should be a first article sample,
standard production item from the contractor's current inventory and the
number of items to be tested as specified in 4.4. The contracting officer
should include specific instructions in acquisition documents regarding
arrangements
for examinations, approval of first article test results, and
disposition of first articles. Invitations for bids should provide that the
Government reserves the right to waive the requirement for samples for first
article inspection to those bidders offering a product which has been
previously acquired or tested by the Government,
and that bidders offering
such products, who wish to rely on such production or test, must furnish
evidence with the bid that prior Government approval is presently appropriate
for the pending contract.
Def initions.
6.5
6.5.1 Inch-pound units. Inch-pound units are a system of measures based on
the yard and pound commonly used in the United States of America and defined
by the National Institute of Standards and Technology. Inch-pound units
having the same names in other countries may differ in magnitude.
6.5.2 Metric units. Metric units are a system of basic measures defined by
the International System of Units based on "Le Systeme International D'Unites
(SI)," of the International Bureau of Heights and Measures. These units are
described in ASTM E 380 and IEEE 268 (MIL-STD-961).
6.6 Measurement
system. In
this
specification,
all measurements,
and capacities are given in inch-pound units. These
dimensions,
sizes,
measurements may be converted to metric units through the use of the
conversion factors and methods specified in FED-STD-376.
6.7 Changes from previous issues. Marginal notations are not used in this
revision to identify changes with respect to the previous issue due to the
extensiveness of the changes.
6.8 Safety and health requirements. OSHA 29 CFR 1910 limits only the total
hazard level (noise, radiation, electromagnetic emissions, noxious vapors, air
contaminants,
and heat) of the environment in which a machine will operate.
It does not limit the hazard level of individual machines in an operating
environment.
The procuring activity should analyze the existing hazard level
in the proposed operating environment and specify additional requirements
necessary to integrate this new machine into its future environment.
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