Verifying a factory's mold cleaning records is crucial for ensuring product quality, preventing defects, and maintaining compliance (especially in regulated industries like medical devices or food packaging). Here's a step-by-step guide to thorough verification:
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Obtain Records Request:
- Request the specific cleaning records for the molds in question. This should include:
- Mold Identification: Unique mold number, part number produced.
- Cleaning Log/Sheet: Detailed entries for each cleaning event.
- Frequency: Documented cleaning schedule (e.g., after X cycles, after material change, daily/weekly/monthly).
- Method: Documented cleaning procedure (manual, ultrasonic, specific chemicals, tools used).
- Operator/Technician: Name/ID of the person performing the cleaning.
- Date & Time: Precise start and end times.
- Cleaning Verification: Method used to verify cleanliness (e.g., visual inspection checklist, swab test, particle count, ATP test).
- Verification Result: Pass/Fail status and any notes on issues found.
- Supervisor/Reviewer: Name/ID of the person reviewing the cleaning/verification.
- Signatures: Electronic or handwritten signatures for cleaner and reviewer.
- Request the specific cleaning records for the molds in question. This should include:
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Analyze for Completeness & Consistency:
- Coverage: Are all relevant molds included? Are records for the entire audit period available?
- Frequency: Does the documented frequency align with production volume, material type, and historical defect rates? Is it consistent with the factory's own SOPs?
- Method: Is the cleaning method appropriate for the mold material and the materials processed? Is it consistently documented?
- Verification Method: Is the verification method objective and sensitive enough? (e.g., "Visual inspection" alone is weak; "Visual + ATP" is stronger).
- Signatures & Dates: Are signatures present? Are dates/times logical and sequential? Look for gaps, impossible timeframes, or identical timestamps.
- Results Trend: Are there frequent failures? Are failures investigated and documented? Are corrective actions taken?
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Review Supporting Documentation:
- Cleaning Procedures (SOPs): Does the factory have written, approved procedures for mold cleaning and verification? Are they followed per the records?
- Training Records: Are operators and reviewers trained on the cleaning procedures and verification methods? Is training current?
- Calibration Records: Are any verification tools (swab kits, ATP testers, particle counters) calibrated according to schedule? Check calibration certificates.
- Corrective Action Records: For any cleaning failures, are there documented investigations and effective corrective actions implemented?
Phase 2: Physical Verification & Observation
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Unannounced Spot Checks:
- During Cleaning: Visit the cleaning area unexpectedly. Observe an actual cleaning process:
- Is the operator following the documented SOP?
- Are the correct chemicals and tools being used?
- Is the area clean and organized?
- Is the cleaning performed thoroughly (e.g., cavities, runners, ejector pins, vents, slides)?
- Post-Cleaning Verification: Observe the verification step:
- Is the verification method being performed correctly (e.g., proper swabbing technique, ATP testing procedure)?
- Is the result recorded accurately and immediately?
- Is the reviewer present and performing their review?
- During Cleaning: Visit the cleaning area unexpectedly. Observe an actual cleaning process:
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Visual Inspection of Cleaned Molds:
- Random Sampling: Select molds based on risk (high-volume, critical parts, recent history) or randomly.
- Thorough Examination: Inspect the mold cavities, runners, ejector pins, slides, vents, and cooling lines under good lighting. Use magnification if necessary.
- Check for Residue: Look for:
- Material residue (degradation, carbon buildup, streaks)
- Contaminants (dust, oil, fingerprints)
- Damage from cleaning (scratches, pitting)
- Compare to Records: Does the physical condition match the "Pass" status in the records? If not, investigate why.
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Review Verification Tools & Results:
- Check Tools: Examine the swabs, ATP testers, or particle counters being used. Are they within calibration dates? Are consumables (swabs, reagents) fresh and stored correctly?
- Review Test Data: Ask to see recent actual test results (e.g., ATP readings, particle counts). Do they consistently pass the acceptance criteria? Are outliers investigated?
Phase 3: Process Validation & Root Cause Analysis
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Interview Personnel:
- Operators: Ask them about the cleaning process, frequency, challenges, and verification. Do they understand the SOP? Do they feel the schedule is realistic?
- Supervisors/Reviewers: Ask about their role in reviewing records, handling failures, and ensuring process compliance. How do they verify that cleaning is actually happening?
- Quality Assurance: Ask about their audit frequency for mold cleaning, how they investigate discrepancies between records and physical reality, and their process for approving corrective actions.
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Validate Cleaning Schedule Rationale:
Challenge the stated cleaning frequency. Is it based on scientific data (e.g., material degradation studies), historical defect rates, or just a fixed interval? Request evidence supporting the chosen frequency.
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Investigate Discrepancies:
- If you find a mismatch between records and physical evidence (e.g., mold looks dirty but records say "Pass"), dig deeper:
- Who signed off? When? What was their basis?
- Was the verification performed correctly?
- Was the cleaning actually done?
- Is there a systemic issue (e.g., inadequate training, poor procedure, lack of oversight)?
- If you find a mismatch between records and physical evidence (e.g., mold looks dirty but records say "Pass"), dig deeper:
Key Red Flags & Indicators of Potential Issues:
- Handwritten, uncontrolled logbooks (easily altered).
- Missing signatures or dates.
- Identical timestamps for multiple molds or long periods.
- No documented verification method or results.
- Frequent "Pass" results with no evidence of actual verification.
- Physical mold condition significantly worse than records indicate.
- No correlation between cleaning records and defect rates.
- Lack of training or calibration records.
- Vague or incomplete procedure descriptions.
- Inability to locate records for specific molds or time periods.
- Reluctance to allow unannounced access or observation.
Best Practices for Verification:
- Risk-Based Approach: Focus on high-risk molds (critical parts, high volume, sensitive materials).
- Unannounced Visits: Prevent "show" cleaning for audits.
- Triangulate Evidence: Combine document review, physical observation, interviews, and testing.
- Use Objective Tools: Rely on quantitative verification (ATP, particle count) where possible.
- Verify the Verification: Ensure the method used to check cleanliness is itself valid and calibrated.
- Check Trend Data: Look for patterns over time, not just snapshots.
- Document Everything: Record your observations, findings, and evidence meticulously.
By systematically applying these steps, you can move beyond simply trusting the paperwork and gain a true understanding of whether the factory's mold cleaning process is effective and reliably documented.
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