MIL-STD-962D
3.10 DoD Single Stock Point. An office under the Defense Logistics Agency's Document Automation and Production Service, which is responsible for the indexing and distribution of defense specifications, standards, and other related documents and the maintenance of the ASSIST database. The DoD Single Stock Point is also responsible for assigning document identifiers for new standards.
3.11 Grade. A term that implies differences in quality and is usually designated by capital letters, such as, "grade A" or "grade B."
3.12 Inch-pound document. A document having measurement requirements given in rounded, rational, inch-pound units. The magnitudes are meaningful and practical (for example,
1 ounce, not 28.3495 grams). Inch-pound documents are developed for items to interface or operate with other inch-pound items. NOTE: Documents in which magnitudes expressed in metric units (as a result of mathematical conversion from rounded, rational, inch-pound units)
are given first as preferred units with the rounded, rational inch-pound units given in parentheses or in a nonpreferred position are still inch-pound documents.
3.13 Interface standard. A standard that specifies the physical, functional, or military operational environment interface characteristics of systems, subsystems, equipment, assemblies, components, items, or parts to permit interchangeability, interconnection, interoperability, compatibility, or communications.
3.14 International standardization agreement. The record of an agreement among several or all of the member nations of a multinational treaty organization to adopt like or similar
military equipment, ammunition, supplies, and stores. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), American-British-Canadian-Australian Armies (ABCA), and the Air Standards Coordinating Committee (ASCC) are examples of multinational treaty organizations that issue international standardization agreements. Do not confuse this term with standards issued by private sector international organizations, such as the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) or the International Electrotechnical Committee (IEC), which are categorized as non-Government standards.
3.15 Limited-coordination standard . A standard that covers items of interest to a single activity, Military Department, or Defense Agency.
3.16 Manufacturing process standard. A standard that states the desired outcome of manufacturing processes or specifies procedures or criteria on how to perform manufacturing processes.
3.17 Metric documents. A document in which requirements are expressed in rounded, rational, metric units. The magnitudes expressed are meaningful and practical (for example, 10 grams, not 0.35273 ounces). Metric documents are developed for items to interface or operate with other metric items. Documents containing only electrical units that are used in both the metric and inch-pound systems (for example, volts, amps, and ohms) are classified as metric documents. Documents also containing dimensional interfaces must describe these interfaces in metric sizes to be classed as metric documents.
4
For Parts Inquires call Parts Hangar, Inc (727) 493-0744
© Copyright 2015 Integrated Publishing, Inc.
A Service Disabled Veteran Owned Small Business