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- QS9000 - Wikipedia
QS9000 was a quality standard developed by a joint effort of the "Big Three" American automakers, General Motors, Chrysler and Ford It was introduced to the industry in 1994 It has been adopted by several heavy truck manufacturers in the U S as well
- What is QS 9000? - IATF 16949 Store
QS 9000 was an international quality management system (QMS) standard for the automotive industry originally developed by the ‘Big Three’ of the American auto industry, namely, Daimler Chrysler Corporation, Ford Motor Company, General Motors Corporation and major truck manufacturers, and is now managed by AIAG: Automotive Industry Action Group
- QS 9000 TS 16949 :: Overview :: The Quality Portal
QS 9000 establishes a set of standards for the automotive industry This standard incorporates ISO 9001 plus the automotive requirements The QS-9000 3rd Edition will expire 14 Dec 2006 (and ISO 9000:1994 expires 15 Dec 2003) Beyond that date ISO TS 16949:2002 will replace QS-9000
- QS 9000 Certification Definition | What is QS 9000? - Thomasnet
QS 9000 is a company level certification based on quality system requirements related specifically to the automotive industry These standards were developed by the larger automotive companies including Ford, General Motors and DaimlerChrysler This standard is obsolete and has been replaced by either ISO TS 16949 or ISO 9001
- QS-9000 - isixsigma. com
QS-9000 replaced company-specific quality system requirements such as Ford’s Q-101, Chrysler’s Supplier Quality Assurance Manual, GM’s NAO Targets for Excellence, and the Truck Manufacturer’s quality system manuals It eliminated redundancy and waste by providing a common set of quality standards for the industry to follow
- Why QS-9000 was developed and whats in its future. | ASQ
Automotive Why QS-9000 Was Developed and What's in Its Future Auto suppliers were troubled by multiple specifications and standards
- The QS-9000 Standard
The QS-9000 is divided into three (3) sections: 1) all the twenty (20) ISO-9001 elements plus certain automotive requirements; 2) system requirements defined by the 'Big Three' for their own use, which are referred to as 'Additional Requirements' in the standard; and 3) customer-specific requirements, which are requirements that are unique to ev
- Thirty Years after QS-9000: Changing Requirements and Enduring Lessons
Thirty years ago, the initial revision of QS-9000, titled simply, “Quality System Requirements,” was published as a result of a six-year effort to harmonize the quality tools, techniques and system architecture within the automotive industry This was an historic achievement in the automotive world as it was the culmination of an unparalleled lev
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