Reference Designators by Engineering Bom (tiedm2110m000)

Use this session to to link reference designators to a EBOM line.

You must start this session by selecting a EBOM line in the Engineering BOM (tiedm1110m000) session, and click Reference Designators by E-Bom on the toolbar, or on the appropriate menu.

You must click New in this session to select reference designators. You can zoom in the Reference Designator field to the Reference Designators by Engineering Item (tiedm0120m000) session to select reference designators. If you did not already define reference designators by engineering item, you can zoom from the Reference Designators by Engineering Item (tiedm0120m000) session to the Reference Designators (tcmcs0190m000) session to select reference designators.

A reference designator can apply to one or more items on the EBOM line. You must use the Quantity field in this session to indicate the number of items on the EBOM line to which the reference designator applies.

 

Engineering Item

An item in the process of development.

You can define multiple revisions of an engineering item. Typically, the most recent revisions are still in a design or test phase, another revision may have been taken into production, and older revisions are obsolete.

A normal item can only become revision-controlled when it is copied from the Engineering Data Management module.

Revision

A version or revised version of an engineering item (E-item) or a revision-controlled item, that is, an item linked to an E-item. Several revisions of an E-item can exist.

Example

E-item: Mountain bike E-MB01

RevisionDescriptionStatus
A1Draft drawing of bikeNot released
A2Drawing of bikeNot released
A3Parent E-item of bike MB01Released
A4Obsolete bikeCanceled

 

Position

The number of the EBOM line.

Net Quantity

The number of items on the EBOM line that is required to manufacture the end item.

Reference Designator

Indicates the location to insert a component on an item, for example, where to mount an electronic component on a Printed Circuit Board. Reference designators are often used in electronics, and can originate from a Computer-Aided Design (CAD) station.

Description

The description of the reference designator. This can be, for example, a code that expresses the location where you must mount a component item.

Quantity

The number of items on the EBOM line to which the reference designator applies. A reference designator can apply to one or more items on the EBOM line.