Common use of Configuration Control Clause in Contracts

Configuration Control. Pursuant to the Configuration Management Plan developed pursuant to Article 19, Contractor shall establish a configuration control system consistent with the requirements for controlling the hierarchy and arrangement of the Technical Documentation and changes thereto. The system shall record, as a minimum:  Changed items;  Reason for change;  Authority for change;  Date of change;  Approval status; and  Any other significant data. The configuration control system shall differentiate between major and minor changes to the Technical Documentation. All major changes shall require re-submittal of the relevant Technical Documentation to the Owner. Examples of major changes include changes that affect any of the following factors:  Safety;  Schedule or deliveries;  Performance outside the requirements;  Delivered equipment, so as to require retrofit;  Adjustments or schedules affecting operating limits or performance;  Reliability or maintainability outside agreed tolerances;  Physical or functional interchangeability;  Maintenance practices;  Maintenance manuals;  Training;  Spares;  Sources of equipment;  EMI/EMC characteristics;  Interface characteristics;  Environment; and  Compatibility with training program. Changes recording the incorporation of corrections are classified as minor if the correction did not involve a change classified as major. These include changes that deal only with manufacturing processes or sources in a way such that the physical and functional interchangeability, maintenance practices, maintenance manuals, and spares provisioning are unaffected. Minor changes do not require Owner action.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: www.hsr.ca.gov

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Configuration Control. Pursuant to the Configuration Management Plan developed pursuant to Article 19, The Contractor shall establish a configuration control system consistent with the requirements for controlling the hierarchy and arrangement of the Technical Documentation and changes thereto. The system shall record, as a minimum: Changed items;  items • Reason for change;  change • Authority for change;  change • Date of change;  change • Approval status; and  status • Any other significant data. The configuration control system shall differentiate between major and minor changes to the Technical Documentation. All major changes shall require re-submittal of the relevant Technical Documentation to the Owner. Examples of major changes include changes factors that affect any of the following factors:  Safety;  • Safety • Schedule or deliveries;  deliveries • Performance outside the requirements;  requirements • Delivered equipment, so as to require retrofit;  retrofit • Adjustments or schedules affecting operating limits or performance;  performance • Reliability or maintainability outside agreed tolerances;  tolerances • Physical or functional interchangeability;  interchangeability • Maintenance practices;  practices • Maintenance manuals;  Training;  Spares;  manuals • Training • Spares • Sources of equipment;  equipment • EMI/EMC characteristics;  characteristics • Interface characteristics;  Environment; and  characteristics • Environment • Compatibility with training program. Changes recording the incorporation of corrections Minor changes are classified as minor if the correction did those changes that do not involve a change classified as majorrequire Authority’s action. These include changes that deal only with manufacturing processes or sources in a way such that the physical and functional interchangeability, maintenance practices, maintenance manuals, and spares provisioning are unaffected. Minor changes do Changes recording the incorporation of corrections are classified as minor if the correction did not require Owner actioninvolve a change classified as major.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: hsr.ca.gov

Configuration Control. Pursuant to the Configuration Management Plan developed pursuant to Article 19Plan, Contractor shall establish a configuration control system consistent with the requirements for controlling the hierarchy and arrangement of the Technical Documentation and changes thereto. The system System shall record, as a minimum: Changed items; Reason for change; Authority for change;  change;‌ • Date of change; Approval status; and  and‌ • Any other significant data. The configuration control system shall differentiate between major and minor changes to the Technical Documentation. All major changes shall require re-re- submittal of the relevant Technical Documentation to the OwnerAuthority. Examples of major changes include changes that affect any of the following factors: Safety; Schedule or deliveries;  deliveries;‌ • Performance outside the requirements; Delivered equipmentEquipment, so as to require retrofit;  retrofit;‌ • Adjustments or schedules affecting operating limits or performance; Reliability or maintainability outside agreed tolerances; Physical or functional interchangeability;  interchangeability;‌ • Maintenance practices; Maintenance manuals;  manuals;‌ • Training;  Spares;  Sources of equipmentEquipment; EMI/EMC characteristics;  characteristics;‌ • Interface characteristics; Environment; and  and‌ • Compatibility with training program. Changes recording to the Technical Documentation that address the incorporation of corrections are classified as minor if the correction did not involve a change classified as major. These include changes that deal only with manufacturing processes or sources in a way such that the physical and functional interchangeability, maintenance practices, practices and maintenance manuals, and spares provisioning manuals are unaffected. Minor changes do not require Owner action.Authority action.‌

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Track and Systems Agreement

Configuration Control. Pursuant to the Configuration Management Plan developed pursuant to Article 1921, Contractor shall establish a configuration control system System consistent with the requirements for controlling the hierarchy and arrangement of the Technical Documentation and changes thereto. The system System shall record, as a minimum: Changed items;  items;‌ • Reason for change; Authority for change;  change;‌ • Date of change; Approval status; and Any other significant data. The configuration control system System shall differentiate between major and minor changes to the Technical Documentation. All major changes shall require re-submittal of the relevant Technical Documentation to the OwnerAuthority. Examples of major changes include changes that affect any of the following factors: Safety; Schedule or deliveries;  deliveries;‌ • Performance outside the requirements; Delivered equipmentEquipment, so as to require retrofit;  retrofit;‌ • Adjustments or schedules affecting operating limits or performance; Reliability or maintainability outside agreed tolerances; Physical or functional interchangeability;  interchangeability;‌ • Maintenance practices; Maintenance manuals;  manuals;‌ • Training; Spares; Sources of equipment;  Equipment;‌ • EMI/EMC characteristics; Interface characteristics;  characteristics;‌ • Environment; and Compatibility with training program. Changes recording to the Technical Documentation that address the incorporation of corrections are classified as minor if the correction did not involve a change classified as major. These include changes that deal only with manufacturing processes or sources in a way such that the physical and functional interchangeability, maintenance practices, maintenance manuals, and spares provisioning are unaffected. Minor changes do not require Owner Authority action.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Trainset Agreement

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Configuration Control. Pursuant to the Configuration Management Plan developed pursuant to Article 194.2.2, Contractor shall establish a configuration control system consistent with the requirements for controlling the hierarchy and arrangement of the Technical Documentation and changes thereto. The system shall record, as a minimum:  Changed items;  Reason for change;  Authority for change;  Date of change;  Approval status; and  Any other significant data. The configuration control system shall differentiate between major and minor changes to the Technical Documentation. All major changes shall require re-submittal of the relevant Technical Documentation to the Owner. Examples of major changes include changes that affect any of the following factors:  Safety;  Schedule or deliveries;  Performance outside the requirements;  Delivered equipment, so as to require retrofit;  Adjustments or schedules affecting operating limits or performance;  Reliability or maintainability outside agreed tolerances;  Physical or functional interchangeability;  Maintenance practices;  Maintenance manuals;  Training;  Spares;  Sources of equipment;  EMI/EMC characteristics;  Interface characteristics;  Environment; and  Compatibility with training program. Changes recording the incorporation of corrections are classified as minor if the correction did not involve a change classified as major. These include changes that deal only with manufacturing processes or sources in a way such that the physical and functional interchangeability, maintenance practices, maintenance manuals, and spares provisioning are unaffected. Minor changes do not require Owner action.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: www.hsr.ca.gov

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