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Harold F Dodge

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Name
  
Harold Dodge


Died
  
December 10, 1976

Harold F. Dodge asqorgimgaboutdodgegif

Books
  
Sampling inspection tables

Awards
  
Shewhart Medal, Wilks Memorial Award

Harold F. Dodge


Harold French Dodge (January 23, 1893 in Lowell, Massachusetts – December 10, 1976) was one of the principal architects of the science of statistical quality control. He is universally known for his work in originating acceptance sampling plans for putting inspection operations on a scientific basis in terms of controllable risks. Dodge earned his B.S. in Electrical Engineering from M.I.T. in 1916 and his A.B. (Master's degree) in Physics from Columbia University in 1917.

Harold F. Dodge Contractor allowed schools with catastrophic problems to open

From 1917 to 1958 worked at quality assurance department at Bell Laboratories with Walter Shewhart, George Edwards, Harry Romig, R. L. Jones, Paul Olmstead, E.G.D. Paterson, and Mary N. Torrey. At that time the basic concepts of acceptance sampling was developed, such as:

Harold F. Dodge Past International Presidents Lions Clubs International

  • Consumer's Risk,
  • Producer's Risk,
  • double sampling,
  • lot tolerance percent defective (LTPD), and
  • average outgoing quality limit (AOQL).

  • Harold F. Dodge Section History ASQ 0905

    Also he originated several types of:

    Harold F. Dodge World Diptera Taxonomists D

  • acceptance sampling schemes,
  • CSP type continuous sampling plans,
  • chain sampling plans, and
  • skip-lot sampling plans.

  • Harold F. Dodge Isaac Dingman Mary Bennet William Harrison Dingman Elizabeth

    During World War II, Dodge had an office in the Pentagon and served as a consultant to the Secretary of War, to NASA and the Sandia Corporation. He was also chairman of the American Standards Association (now the American National Standards Institute) War Committee Z1, which prepared the Z1.1, Z1.2, and Zl.3 quality control standards.

    After he retired from Bell Labs in 1958, Dodge became a professor of applied mathematical statistics at Rutgers.

    The American Society for Testing and Materials honors Harold Dodge's memory with the Harold F. Dodge Award.

    References

    Harold F. Dodge Wikipedia