Key Takeaways
- Quality management is a system—QA prevents defects, QC detects them, data improves both.
- Four-gate inspection catches defects at lowest correction cost.
- Measurable tolerances and industry standards replace subjective quality arguments.
- Digital tools reduce QC documentation time 50-70% vs. paper-based systems.
Review of QC fundamentals, trade checklists, defect classification, inspection tools, and quality standards.
Track 1 Recap
Quality management combines QA (prevention) and QC (detection)—rule of 1-10-100 shows prevention is 100x cheaper than post-completion correction. Four-gate inspection model (pre-construction, rough-in, pre-finish, final) catches defects at lowest cost. Trade-specific checklists with measurable tolerances standardize expectations. Four-level defect severity classification (Critical/Major/Minor/Observation) ensures appropriate response. Inspection tools from moisture meters to IR cameras detect hidden defects. Published standards (GA, ANSI, ASTM) create enforceable contract quality requirements.
Risk Scoring Matrix
Sources
- International Code Council — Inspection Guidelines(2025-01-15)
- NAHB Residential Warranty Claim Survey(2025-01-15)
- Philip Crosby — Quality Is Free (1-10-100 Rule)(2025-01-15)
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Not establishing a quality control checklist before construction begins
Consequence: Quality checks are inconsistent, important verifications are missed, and defects are discovered too late
Correction: Create a phase-by-phase QC checklist covering each trade and milestone, and review it systematically during every site visit
Test Your Knowledge
1.What is the rule of 1-10-100 in quality management?
2.What drywall finish level should be specified for painted walls?
3.What tile lippage is acceptable for tiles 15 inches or smaller?