Check whether your critical machined parts have a real backup supplier.

A practical checklist for OEMs, machinery builders and industrial operators that rely on precision machined components and cannot afford supplier failure, undocumented process knowledge or reactive ordering.

 

A second-source supplier is not something to find after the first supplier has already failed. By then the problem is usually compressed into incomplete drawings, unclear inspection requirements, unavailable material history and too much pressure on price and lead time.

What the checklist helps identify

  1. Single supplier exposure on critical machined components.
  2. Drawing, material and inspection readiness gaps.
  3. Parts that should be reviewed before the next urgent order.
  4. Whether the next step is monitoring, review, first batch or planned supply.

For repeat parts

Not isolated one-off price checks.

For critical machinery

Rotating, reciprocating, vibrating or moving equipment.

For supplier risk

Single-source, lead time or quality exposure.

For planned action

Review before the problem becomes urgent.

One supplier doing the work is not the same as a supply strategy.

The risk is not always visible while the part is still arriving. It appears when lead times stretch, drawings are incomplete, inspection knowledge sits with one person, or the next order is needed faster than the current supplier can respond.

This checklist is for buyers with real component supply exposure.

For repeat shafts, housings, rollers, plates, bushes, spacers, flanges, wear parts and change parts used in build-to-print machinery.

OEM machinery builders
Industrial operators

For repeat shafts, housings, rollers, plates, bushes, spacers, flanges, wear parts and change parts used in build-to-print machinery.

Procurement and engineering teams

For teams that need to separate real supplier risk from routine price checking and uncontrolled drawing circulation.

A practical review before second-source qualification.

The checklist is designed to help the buyer identify which parts should move into a component supply review, not to create a broad drawing dump or a rushed quoting exercise.

Part criticality

What happens if the part is late, wrong, unavailable or no longer supported by the current supplier.

Supplier dependency

Whether supply depends on one shop, one programmer, one undocumented process or one fragile relationship.

Drawing readiness

Drawing revision, material grade, finish, tolerances, datum clarity and missing information.

Inspection clarity

Critical features, first article needs, certificates, traceability and buyer acceptance criteria.

Repeat demand

Batch size, annual demand, service pattern, shutdown timing and reorder behaviour.

Next action

Batch size, lead time, repeat pricing assumptions and future demand can be reviewed with better information.

From checklist to review to controlled first batch.

The aim is to qualify the right backup supply pathway before the current supply position fails.

Complete the checklist

Identify supplier dependency, drawing gaps, repeat demand and consequence of failure.

Select one part or part family

Do not start with every drawing. Choose a part that proves the right technical and supply risk.

Submit a component supply review

Provide enough information for ALE to assess technical, production and commercial fit.

Quote a controlled first batch if suitable

The first batch proves drawing control, machining method, inspection approach and communication rhythm.

Move suitable work into planned supply

Approved parts can move into repeat or second-source supply planning where fit is confirmed.

Download the second-source supplier checklist.

Use the checklist to identify whether a critical machined part should stay on a watch list, move into a supply review or be prepared for second-source qualification.

Best use

After submitting, the checklist PDF will download automatically and your details will be sent to the Alfred Lewis Engineering team.

Contact details

second-source supplier checklist

The next step is not to send every drawing for quote.

Identify the part or part family that carries the most supply risk. Then submit that part for a controlled component supply review so technical fit, drawing readiness, inspection needs and repeat demand can be assessed properly.