Your component supply risk appears controlled.

The current supply position does not show immediate operational exposure. Keep the part, drawing and supplier record current so this does not become a future urgent requirement.

This result is a decision aid. It does not replace engineering review, supplier qualification or commercial assessment. For critical machined components, the next step is to identify the right part, confirm the drawing and inspection requirements, then decide whether the work fits ALE’s production system.

Controlled component supply risk

Recommended action: Document and monitor

0 to 34

Indicative score band

Controlled

Risk category

The scorecard should route buyers to this result after completion. For implementation, use either a score parameter or a fixed result slug.

How to interpret this score.

Use this result to maintain control, not to ignore the part. Start a review when the component becomes more critical, demand becomes more regular or the current supplier position changes.

Supply risk is usually operational, not just commercial.

Machined component supply risk is rarely only a price issue. It usually sits across drawing control, supplier capacity, repeat demand, inspection clarity and lead time.

Risk factor

Single-source dependency can still become a problem when lead times change.

Risk factor

Drawings and inspection requirements can drift over time.

Risk factor

Low-volume repeat parts are often left unmanaged until a maintenance or production issue appears.

Risk factor

Supplier performance should still be reviewed before the next critical ordering window.

Move from score to action.

The right action depends on the score band. Higher scores should be narrowed quickly to one part or one coherent part family, not an uncontrolled list of drawings.

Action

Keep the part on a controlled watch list.

Action

Confirm the current drawing revision, material requirement and inspection points.

Action

Review supplier lead time and quality history at least annually.

Action

Manufacture the agreed first batch under controlled conditions with the required inspection feedback loop.

Where this result should send the buyer.

The result page should route the buyer to one clear action, based on the score band and the seriousness of the supply risk.

Controlled risk

Document the part, monitor supplier performance and review before the next annual demand cycle.

Emerging risk

Prepare drawing, material and inspection details, then complete a component supply review.

High or severe risk

Select one critical part or part family and request a review before the next urgent order compresses the options.

Prepare these details before submitting a part.

The result page should route the buyer to one clear action, based on the score band and the seriousness of the supply risk.

Part and application

Part name, part number, machine, assembly and failure consequence.

Technical information

Drawing revision, material, finish, tolerances, critical features and inspection requirements.

Commercial context

Batch size, annual demand, current supplier position, lead time, timing and repeat supply expectation.

Do not wait until every option is urgent.

For repeat, critical and planned machined component work, the better starting point is a controlled component supply review. That review helps establish whether ALE is a suitable technical, production and commercial fit.