Defense equipment failures can cost lives. From body armor stitching to ammunition packaging, every component must meet exacting specifications. MIL-STD-1916 and NATO AQAP standards mandate rigorous sampling with near-zero acceptance for critical defects.
AQL levels for defense range from 0.065 to 0.15, the tightest in any industry. Lot rejection is mandatory if even one critical defect is found in the sample. Full traceability and documentation are required for every inspection.
| Defect Type | AQL | Inspection Level | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Critical (structural, ballistic) | 0.065 | Special S-4 | Zero defects accepted |
| Major (dimensional, marking) | 0.10 | General II | MIL-STD compliance |
| Minor (cosmetic, finish) | 0.15 | General II | Still very strict |
A lot of 5,000 tactical vests had inconsistent seam strength. AQL 0.065 inspection caught the issue before deployment, potentially saving lives in the field.
Ammunition storage containers were tested at AQL 0.10 for seal integrity. Two defective seals were found in the sample, leading to full lot rejection and supplier corrective action.
Without proper AQL inspection, 10,000 units shipped with incorrect NATO stock numbers. The logistical confusion caused a 6-week delay in equipment deployment.