About Course
Technical cleanliness, as defined in standards, relates to the absence and limitation of defined contamination. A complete lack of particle adhesion (solid matter) is not possible; therefore, appropriate requirements must accept an allowable degree of defined particle (residual) contamination.
A bolt that complies with a cleanliness requirement is not necessarily clean. However, the amount, type, and size of the particles must be defined and controlled.
In this course we will go through how to evaluate the cleanliness and what to take in to consideration to achieve a better cleanliness level.
Course Content
Technical cleanliness (e-learning)
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Before you begin, make sure to
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Welcome to this e-learning module!
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Technical cleanliness
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Introduction
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Why is cleanliness important?
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Where do contaminated particles usually come from?
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Standards of cleanliness
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Extraction methods
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Analysis filtration
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Analysis method
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Documentation
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Definition of cleanliness level (part 1)
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Definition of cleanliness level (part 2)
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Definition of cleanliness level (part 3)
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Example of cleanliness requirement (part 1)
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Example of cleanliness requirement (part 2)
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Example of cleanliness requirement (part 3)
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Example product with cleanliness requirement
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Cleanliness in the bolt manufacturing process (part 1)
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Cleanliness in the bolt manufacturing process (part 2)
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Cleanliness in the bolt manufacturing process (part 3)
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Cleanliness in the bolt manufacturing process (part 4)
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Cleanliness in the bolt manufacturing process (part 5)
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Cleanliness vs cost
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Summary
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Congratulations !
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Technical cleanliness quiz