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4.5 Supplier corrective action (SCAR/8d) + effectiveness check

A Supplier Corrective Action Request (SCAR) is not merely an administrative complaint form; it is a formal demand for a systemic engineering change. If we simply instruct a supplier to “fix the bad parts,” they are perfectly positioned to rework the current inventory and potentially ship us the exact same defect next month. The fundamental goal of a SCAR is to forcefully drive a permanent improvement in the supplier’s overall process so that the specific defect becomes impossible to reproduce.

We must be careful not to dilute the impact of a SCAR by issuing one for every minor, one-off discrepancy. They should be reserved for situations where process capability has measurably degraded or systemic risks are exposed.

The Escalation Logic:

  • Level 1: Critical (Stop Ship)
    • Trigger: Safety hazards, Regulatory violations (e.g. RoHS/REACH compliance failures), or any severe defect resulting in a “Line Down” event lasting > 4 hours.
    • Response: A 24-hour Containment (D3) plan from the supplier is mandatory.
  • Level 2: Major (Systemic)
    • Trigger: A repeat defect (the identical MPN and failure mode occurring within a 90-day window) or an incoming Defect Rate exceeding 1%.
    • Response: A comprehensive 8D Report is required to find the true root cause.
  • Level 3: Minor (Trend)
    • Trigger: Persistent documentation errors (like missing CoCs) or a slow, negative trend in the Supplier Scorecard metrics.
    • Response: A standard, simpler Corrective Action Plan (CAP) format is usually acceptable here.

The 8d methodology (mandatory architecture)

Section titled “The 8d methodology (mandatory architecture)”

Formal, recurring issues require a formal, structured architecture to solve them. We do not accept brief “email explanations” for critical failures. Suppliers should be required to structure their response using the standard Eight Disciplines (8D) methodology.

  • D3: Interim Containment (The Tourniquet)
    • Requirement: Isolate the problem immediately. The supplier must explicitly define how they screened their suspect stock (e.g. “100% visual check under 4x magnification”) and how they identified the verified clean boxes they are shipping us (e.g. “We placed a Green Dot on the shipping label”).
    • Deadline: Usually expected within 24 Hours.
  • D4: Root Cause Analysis (The Pathology)
    • Core Principle: “Operator Error” is almost never a valid Root Cause. If an operator made a mistake, the process failed to prevent or detect that mistake.
    • Tools: Suppliers should provide documented evidence of a 5 Whys or Fishbone (Ishikawa) analysis.
    • Poor D4: “The worker didn’t follow the SOP.”
    • Good D4: “The assembly fixture allowed the part to be loaded backwards because it lacked a mechanical keying pin.”
  • D5/D6: Permanent Corrective Action (The Fix)
    • Goal: We are looking for a systemic or hardware change, not just behavioral retraining.
    • Hierarchy of Intervention: 1. Poka-Yoke (Mistake Proofing): Physical modification to the tooling (Strongest). 2. Process Change: Implementation of automated inspection or sensors (Strong). 3. Training: An informational update via a team meeting (Weakest - Reject the SCAR if this is the entirety of the proposed action plan).
  • D7: Prevention (System Update)
    • Requirement: The corrective action must propagate down to the core line documentation. We look for updates to the supplier’s PFMEA (to demonstrably lower the Occurrence or Detection risk scores) and the corresponding updates to the Control Plan.

A SCAR is never closed based simply on a promise; it is closed exclusively on physical evidence.

The “3-Shipment” Rule:

  • Guideline: Once a Permanent Corrective Action (PCA) is allegedly implemented, the SCAR enters a “Monitoring” state.
  • Action: The subsequent 3 consecutive shipments from the supplier must be entirely defect-free.
    • Pro-Tip: Tag these initial, post-SCAR shipments in your ERP system as “Probationary.” IQC should be flagged to perform a 100% inspection specifically focused on the characteristic that previously failed.

Re-Open Logic:

  • Guideline: If the exact same defect recurs within 6 months, the previous SCAR was inherently ineffective and the root cause was missed.
  • Action: Re-open the issue immediately as a Level 1 Escalation. In this scenario, it is often appropriate to require the supplier’s Quality Director to formally present their revised remediation plan directly to our Management team.

Final Checkout: Supplier corrective action (SCAR/8d) + effectiveness check

Section titled “Final Checkout: Supplier corrective action (SCAR/8d) + effectiveness check”
Control PointGuiding Principle
Response TimeD3 (Containment) action should be delivered within 24 Hours. A late D3 often warrants an immediate New Business Hold.
Root CauseFocus on the underlying Process/Method failure. Push back on “Retrain Operator” as a valid Root Cause.
Action PlanMandate a physical or systemic change. The plan must robustly address both detection logic and future prevention.
VerificationLook for 3 consecutive completely clean lots. Never fully close a SCAR without confirming the incoming IQC data.
DocumentationVerify the supplier’s PFMEA & Control Plan are visibly updated. The fix must be institutionalized into their QMS, not left as tribal knowledge.