The FQA, signed by President Clinton on June 8, 1999, includes a number of amendments to
the original legislation passed in 1990 to make it more focused and less burdensome. These
include:
-manufactured to standards and specifications of consensus standards organizations
or government agencies that require a grade mark; and
-meet the minimum specified tensile strength criterion.
Many fasteners are exempted from coverage including those:
-that are part of an assembly;
- that are ordered for use as a spare, substitute, service or replacement
part unless that part is in a package containing more than 75 of any such
part at the time of sale or that part is contained in an assembly kit;
- produced and marked as ASTM A 307 Grade A;
- produced in accordance with the ASTM F 432 standard;
- specifically manufactured for an aircraft if the quality is approved by
the Federal Aviation Administration or by a foreign airworthiness authority;
- manufactured in accordance with International Organization for Standardization
(ISO) 9000, 9001, 9002 or TS16949; Quality System (QS) 9000; or other fastener
quality assurance system defined by the law; or
- manufactured to a proprietary standard.
To encourage the use of quality management systems such as QS 9000, fasteners
are exempt from the FQA if they are manufactured in a facility using such
a system.
If an accreditation organization chooses not to follow ISO guidelines for
registration and accreditation, they may submit documents to the NIST director
that establish their own guidance/requirements for (1) accredited bodies
to register manufacturing systems as meeting FQA quality assurance requirements;
(2) accreditation of testing laboratories; and (3) approval of accreditation
bodies to accredit testing labs.
Last updated: 06/09/99
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