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SAME AS ISO 3951-3

This Part of ISO 3951 specifies an acceptance sampling system of double sampling schemes for inspection by variables for percent nonconforming. It is indexed in terms of the acceptance quality limit (AQL).
The objectives of the methods laid down in this Part of ISO 3951 are to ensure that lots of acceptable quality have a high probability of acceptance and that the probability of non-accepting inferior lots is as high as practicable. This is achieved by means of the switching rules, which provide:
a) automatic protection to the consumer (by means of a switch to tightened inspection or discontinuation of sampling inspection) should a deterioration in quality be detected;
b) an incentive (at the discretion of the responsible authority) to reduce inspection costs (by means of a switch to a smaller sample size) should consistently good quality be achieved.
In this Part of ISO 3951, the acceptability of a lot is implicitly or explicitly determined from an estimate of the percentage of nonconforming items in the process, based on either one or two random samples of items from the lot.
This Part of ISO 3951 is primarily designed for use under the following conditions:
a) where the inspection procedure is to be applied to a continuing series of lots of discrete products all supplied by one producer using one production process. If there are different producers or production processes, this Part of ISO 3951 shall be applied to each one separately;
b) where the items of product have a single quality characteristic (for multiple quality characteristics, see informative annexes A, B and C);
c) where the quality characteristic is measurable on a continuous scale;
d) where the measurement error is negligible (i.e. with a standard deviation no more than 10 % of the
corresponding process standard deviation);
e) where production is stable (under statistical control) and the quality characteristic is distributed, at least to a close approximation, according to a normal distribution;
CAUTION The procedures in this Part of ISO 3951 are not suitable for application to lots that have been screened previously for nonconforming items.
f) where the possibility of having to select and inspect a second sample is administratively acceptable;
g) where a contract or standard defines an upper specification limit U, a lower specification limit L, or both on the quality characteristic. An item is deemed to conform if its measured quality characteristic x satisfies the appropriate one of the following inequalities: