Precision Machined Parts: What Actually Happens at Inspection
Precision machining services are often marketed with three words: CMM, ISO, FAI. That tells a buyer almost nothing. This guide breaks down the actual inspection sequence that precision machined parts go through at VNcontX’s facility in Bình Chánh, Ho Chi Minh City — from first-article sign-off to the CMM data pack that ships with every production order.
Why “We Have a CMM” Is Not an Inspection Process
A Coordinate Measuring Machine (CMM) is a tool. Buying one does not create a quality system. What matters is the protocol around it: which dimensions are measured, in what sequence, against which revision of the drawing, and what happens when a measurement falls outside tolerance.
At VNcontX, the Zeiss Contura and Mitutoyo CMM units run a defined measurement plan that is built directly from the GD&T callouts on the customer’s 2D drawing. Every critical-to-function (CTF) dimension is captured. Every datum reference frame is established before any measurement begins. The output is a dimensional report — not a pass/fail stamp.
The distinction matters to buyers sourcing precision machining services from Vietnam or any offshore location: a pass/fail stamp tells you the supplier checked the part. A dimensional report tells you by how much, with traceability to the specific machine and operator. That is the document that survives an incoming inspection at your facility.
The Five Inspection Stages for Every Production Order
Most buyers see two checkpoints: first article and final inspection. The actual sequence has five distinct stages, each serving a different function.
| Stage | What Is Checked | Output Document |
|---|---|---|
| 01 — Drawing Review | Revision lock, tolerance stack-up review, material callout, finish spec, any PPAP or AS9100 requirements | DFM feedback memo (sent to buyer before cutting) |
| 02 — Material Verification | Mill cert match vs. drawing spec, heat number, hardness (if required) | Material certification on file, shared on request |
| 03 — First Article Inspection (FAI) | 100% of drawing dimensions on first-off part. CMM on all critical GD&T callouts. Cpk/Ppk calculated for any feature with a statistical sample requirement | FAI report + CMM printout — customer sign-off before production release |
| 04 — In-Process Inspection | Sample AQL per production lot. Machining offsets logged. Any toolwear-induced drift flagged and corrected before batch completes | In-process inspection log (internal) |
| 05 — Final Inspection | 100% visual. CMM re-check on CTF dimensions per agreed AQL. Surface finish measurement (Ra profilometer). Finish and marking verification | Certificate of Conformance (CoC) + CMM data pack shipped with parts |
Key point for procurement teams: Stages 03 and 05 are the documents that matter for your incoming QC. Ask any supplier you’re evaluating to show you a sample FAI report and CoC from a previous order. The format and data density will tell you immediately whether their inspection is real or ceremonial.
Reading GD&T Callouts the Way a Machine Shop Does
Custom machined parts often carry GD&T callouts that go beyond a simple ±0.1mm bilateral tolerance. Position, concentricity, flatness, perpendicularity — each requires a different measurement setup. Misreading a datum reference frame means the entire measurement is invalid, even if the numbers look fine.
The callouts that most often cause problems in production
True position (⌖): The most common callout on hole patterns. Measured as a diameter zone around the theoretically exact location. A position callout of ⌀0.05mm at MMC means the allowable zone changes as the hole departs from its maximum material condition. Shops that measure position as two linear deviations (X and Y) rather than a diameter zone will report false passes.
Flatness (⏥): Applies to a surface without referencing any datum. A flatness callout of 0.02mm means the entire surface must lie within two parallel planes 0.02mm apart. Relevant on sealing surfaces, mating flanges, and any heat-transfer interface. Measured with a surface plate and indicator, or CMM point cloud.
Runout (↗ / ↗↗): Circular and total runout are checked on rotating features — shafts, bores, OD shoulders. Requires the part to be rotated on the datum axis during measurement. Total runout is the more stringent callout; it controls both circularity and cylindricity relative to the datum.
Perpendicularity (⊥): Common on pins, bosses, and bored holes that interface with a mating assembly. A perpendicularity error that looks small in isolation compounds in a multi-component stack-up — tolerance stack-up analysis at the drawing review stage prevents this from becoming a rejection at assembly.
Cpk and Ppk: What the Numbers Actually Mean for Your Order
Process capability indices appear on many supplier data packs. Most buyers see Cpk ≥ 1.33 or Cpk ≥ 1.67 as a requirement in their supplier qualification documents — but few have clarity on what the index actually represents for their specific order.
| Index | What It Measures | Minimum Acceptable | VNcontX Standard |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cp | Process spread vs. tolerance bandwidth — ignores centering | ≥ 1.33 | ≥ 1.67 |
| Cpk | Worst-case distance from process mean to nearest spec limit | ≥ 1.33 | ≥ 1.67 |
| Ppk | Same as Cpk but uses overall process variation — includes setup shifts between runs | ≥ 1.33 | ≥ 1.33 long-run |
A Cpk of 1.67 corresponds to approximately 0.57 defects per million opportunities (DPMO) — well inside Six Sigma territory for a stable process. The important caveat: Cpk is only meaningful when measured from a sufficient sample size. A Cpk calculated from 5 parts is not statistically valid. For critical features, VNcontX calculates Cpk from a minimum 30-part initial sample, then monitors with SPC charting for ongoing production runs above 200 pieces.
Practical implication: If a supplier quotes you Cpk ≥ 1.67 but cannot tell you the sample size behind the number, ask for the raw measurement data. The calculation takes 30 seconds in any spreadsheet. A legitimate shop will hand it over immediately.
What Ships With Your Parts: The VNcontX Documentation Pack
Customs machined parts from Ho Chi Minh City arrive at US West Coast ports in 18–22 days by sea, 2–3 days by air to LAX. What matters for your incoming QC team is what arrives with the parts — not just the parts themselves.
Every VNcontX production shipment includes:
Certificate of Conformance (CoC) — States the part number, revision, quantity, material spec, finish spec, and an explicit declaration that all dimensions meet drawing requirements. Signed by the Quality Controller.
CMM Dimensional Report — Lists every measured dimension with nominal, upper and lower tolerance, actual measurement, and deviation. CTF dimensions flagged. Generated directly from the CMM software — not manually entered.
Material Certification — Mill cert from the material supplier, with heat number traceable to the specific bar or plate used. Standard on all stainless, titanium, and aerospace-grade aluminum orders. Available on request for all other materials.
Finish Certification — For anodize, passivation, electroless nickel, and other specified surface treatments: the processor’s certification confirming process spec (e.g., MIL-A-8625F Type III for hard anodize, ASTM A967 for passivation).
First Article Inspection Report (FAIR) — On first-time orders and any engineering change. 100% dimensional balloon check against a marked-up drawing. Delivered electronically for customer sign-off before production release, then included in the physical shipment.
Three Inspection Failures That Buyers Encounter with Offshore Suppliers
These are not hypothetical scenarios. They represent the most common quality gaps reported by engineering procurement teams switching from a previous offshore supplier to VNcontX.
1. FAI done on a different machine than production
A first article passes because the shop ran it on their best machine with extra attention. Production runs on a different, older machine. The process capability of the production machine is never validated. The result: FAI passes, production has chronic fallout. The fix is requiring the FAI to be run on the same machine(s) that will run the production order — and having that documented in the FAI report.
2. Tolerance conversion errors between metric and imperial drawings
A drawing specifies ±0.002 inches. The shop machines to ±0.05mm. That is ±0.00197 inches — technically inside tolerance. But if the shop misreads the callout as ±0.002mm (a factor of 25 tighter), they either reject good parts or — worse — miss the tighter interpretation and ship parts that are borderline. Drawing review at VNcontX confirms every tolerance conversion before any material is cut.
3. Surface finish measured in the wrong direction
Ra (arithmetic average roughness) is a directional measurement. On a turned shaft, measuring Ra along the lay rather than across it produces a reading 3–5x lower than the actual functional surface. A buyer specifies Ra 0.8μm (the standard finish from VNcontX’s process) but receives a part with Ra 0.8μm measured along the tool path — which may be Ra 3.2μm across the lay, which is the direction the mating seal will contact. The fix is specifying measurement direction on the drawing, and using a calibrated profilometer with a traceable standard.
Frequently Asked Questions
For buyers evaluating Vietnam manufacturing for regulated industries, the First Article Inspection (FAI) guide covers the FAIR documentation format in detail — including the AS9102 reporting standard used by aerospace supply chains.
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