and must have inspection documentation maintained on
record. You must retain traceability through the repair
and installation process. It requires special marking and
tagging for identification and separate storage to
preclude loss of control. The RO may designate as
controlled material any material that requires material
traceability.
Under this definition, controlled material has two
meanings. The first meaning applies to items considered
critical enough to warrant the label of controlled
material. Your CMPOs will be responsible for
inspecting the material when it is received, stowing it
separately from other material, providing custody, and
seeing that controlled assembly procedures are used
during its installation. The term controlled material is
used in reference to material either labeled
SUBSAFE or classed in one of the three levels of
essentiality. (Strictly speaking, SUBSAFE is not a level
of essentiality.)
SUBSAFE
To help you understand SUBSAFE, we will discuss
a little of the background of the program. The Submarine
Safety Program (hence, the SUBSAFE) was established
in 1963 as a direct result of the loss of the USS
THRESHER. The program is two-fold, consisting of
both material and operability requirements. It provides
a high level of confidence in the material conditions of
the hull integrity boundary and in the ability of the
submarines to recover from control surface casualties
and flooding.
SUBSAFE requirements
categories, which are devoted to
are split into five
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
piping systems,
flooding control and recovery.
documentation,
pressure hull boundary, and
government-furnished material.
There are three SUBSAFE definitions you need to
consider: SUBSAFE system, SUBSAFE boundary, and
SUBSAFE material.
SUBSAFE System
This is any submarine system determined by
NAVSEA to require the special material or operability
requirements of the SUBSAFE program. How does it
concern you? After you have installed a system, it must
prevent flooding of the submarine, enhance recovery in
the event of flooding, and ensure reliable ship control.
SUBSAFE Boundary
A SUBSAFE boundary marks the specific portion
of a SUBSAFE system within which the stringent
material or operability requirements of SUBSAFE
apply.
SUBSAFE Material
Within the SUBSAFE boundary, two different sets
of requirements apply-SUBSAFE and Level I. What is
the difference between the two? The difference is
expressed by two words, certification and verification.
Material certification pertains to the SUBSAFE
program. This means that an item certified as SUBSAFE
meets a certain testing or fabrication requirement and
can be used as intended in a critical hull integrity or
pressure-containing role. On the other hand, material
verification pertains to the Level I program. An item
specified as Level I has had its material composition
tested and verified. This testing and verification ensures
traceability from the material back to a lot or batch to
ensure that its material composition complies with
procurement specifications.
DEPARTURE FROM SPECIFICATION
Specifications are engineering requirements such as
type of material, dimensional clearances, and physical
arrangements, by which ship components are installed,
tested, and maintained. All ships, surface and
submarine, are designed and constructed to specific
technical and physical requirements. As a supervisor,
you must ensure that your personnel make every effort
to maintain all ship systems and components according
to published specifications. What do you do if a
specification cannot be met? Don t panic! There are,
on occasion, situations in which specifications cannot
be met. In such cases, the system or component is
controlled with a deviation from specification. To
maintain precise control of a ships technical
configuration, any deviation you make must be recorded
and approved as a departure from specification.
DEFINING A DEPARTURE FROM
SPECIFICATION
Plainly put, a departure from specification is a lack
of compliance with an authoritative document, plan,
procedure, or instruction. As a minimum, departures are
required when the following situations recur:
1. There is a
technical
lack of compliance with cognizant
documents, drawings, or work
6-11