Enter General Purchase Part Info

Explanation

This activity is used to enter a new purchase part, or to enter supplementary information on an inventory-registered purchase part.

A purchase part can either be an inventory-registered part or a non-inventory registered part.

You can enable the purchase part to be purchased with the required acquisition type for it. The possible values of Acquisition Types are Purchase Only, Purchase and Rental and Rental Only

When entering a purchase part directly in the Purchase Part page, you have to enter the part number, part description, site, and a default purchase unit of measure. You can define whether a part is taxable. When the purchase part record is automatically generated from the inventory part entry, unless you need to specify any additional information, you do not have to add any. The acquisition type of the purchase part is set to Purchase Only by default when you create a new purchase part record. 

To add additional (optional) settings on an inventory-registered purchase part, query for the part in question and add the desired information. Examples of additional settings are quality control analyst, buyer, order processing type, automatic closing control, over delivery control, and technical coordinator. When working in a multi-site environment, consider using a special purchase group for your parts.

You can connect informational text on the purchase part, such as document text and notes.
 
On the Purchase Part/Suppliers tab, you can easily view a summary of all available suppliers for this purchase part. On the Purchase Part/Supplier Agreements tab you can view a summary of all the supplier agreements that this purchase part is associated with. On the Quality Requirements tab you can define quality requirements for the purchase part. The Purchase Part/Characteristics tab, the Purchase Part/Descriptions tab, the Purchase Part/Supplier Split tab and the Quality Requirements tab are described in separate activity descriptions.

 

Prerequisites

Additional settings:

System Effects