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TERMS
AND DEFINITIONS
All-Up-Round
(AUR). An AUR is a weapon that is issued as a
complete assembly (less wings and fins).
Ammunition.
Ammunition is conventional expendable ordnance material, which includes gun type
ammunition, bombs, rockets, ASW weapons, guided missiles, mines, torpedoes,
demolition, and pyrotechnic materials. For the purpose of this discussion,
ammunition includes all items assigned a four-digit NALC as listed in the
publication Navy Ammunition Logistics Codes,
NAVAIR 11-1-116B/ TW010-AA-ORD-030. This also includes OT cognizance material
(Marine Corps expendable ordnance).
Ammunition
allowances. Ammunition allowances are established to
maintain operational units in a mission-ready posture. The different types and
quantities of ammunition a unit is allowed to carry depend upon the unit's
mission assignment. Also, a unit's ammunition allowance reflects allowances for
training, peacetime missions, and wartime missions.
The Chief of Naval Operations approves ammunition allowance lists.
Ammunition stocking level lists identifies the type and quantity of combat
ordnance authorized to be carried on board. Separate cargo and/or mission load
ammunition allowance lists are provided for combat landing force (CLF) ships,
amphibious force ships, tenders and aircraft carriers, which are developed by
the fleet and type commanders. These
lists identify the ordnance authorized to support the mission assignment. A few
of the ammunition allowances are described in the following statements.
Approved
basic stock level of ammunition (ABSLA) is the quantity of non-nuclear ordnance
at a
shore facility to support all aspects of that activity's mission until resupply
can be effected.
Cargo load allowance is the allowance of ammunition carried by AE, AOE,
AOR, and AO class
ships. This ammunition is issued to other fleet units in support of their
assigned mission.
Mission
load allowance is the
allowance of ammunition carried by CV, LPH, AD, and AS class ships in support of
their assigned mission, exclusive of the ship’s own armament.
Shipfill
allowance (formerly ship's service allowance) is the allowance of ammunition for
the ships permanently installed armament. Shipfill ammunition does not include
ammunition held for issue to other activities. Changes to the shipfill allowance list require prior approval of the Chief
of Naval Operations. A proposed
change should be submitted by letter from the ship concerned through the normal
chain of command. Changes to the
cargo or mission load allowance lists require prior approval of CINCLANTFLT.
Proposed changes to the cargo or mission load allowance lists should be
submitted to CINCLANTFLT through the normal chain of command.
Check-sum-digit.
The check-sum-digit is the last digit in a sum of numbers. It is entered after a
slant mark (/) immediately following the number being checked.
For example, in the entry E487 (4+8+7=19), 9 are the check-sum-digit. The
entry is written as E487/9. The check-sum-digit provides
Naval
Ammunition
Logistics
Center
with a check and balance to ensure that the proper NALC is entered on DD Form
1345, register four.
Cognizance
symbol (COG). The cognizance symbol is a two-digit NSN
prefix that identifies the systems command, office, agency, or inventory control
point exercising supply management for a specific
category of ammunition. For example, in NSN 2E1425-00-940-1347-E075, the
two-digit symbol 2E is the COG. (Refer to fig. 17-1.) COG symbols are listed in
NAVAIR 11-1-116B/TW010-AA-ORD-030.
Complete
round. A complete round is one that is or can be
assembled from any acceptable combination of components. It is capable of being
used operationally without the performance of work on the round other than
normal assembly operations.
Department
of Defense Ammunition Code (DODAC).
The Department of Defense Ammunition Code
(DODAC) is made up of the federal supply class (FSC) plus the DODIC or NALC. For
example, in NSN 2E1425-00-940-1347-E075, the DODAC is 1425E075.
Department
of Defense Identification Code (DODIC). The Department of
Defense Identification Code (DODIC), is a four-digit code assigned by the
Defense Logistics Services Center (DLSC) and it identifies ammunition and
explosive items. The acronyms DODIC and NALC, or their respective meanings are
used interchangeably in the remainder of this chapter.
Expenditure.
An expenditure occurs when an item is permanently removed from the Navy
inventory. A round that is detonated, burned, fired, exploded, surveyed or lost
by inventory, deepwater dumped, or transferred to other services or another
country is posted and reported as an expenditure. Transfers of ammunition to
other Navy/Marine Corps activities are NOT expenditures.
The various types of expenditures include combat, training, test and
evaluation,
operational, disposal, loss by inventory, and transfers out of the Navy
reporting system.
Gain
by inventory (GBI). A GBI is an increase in the asset position
based upon physical inventory of an ammunition item.
Issue.
An issue is the transfer of an item, regardless of its serviceability condition,
to another activity. This includes off-loads to shore activities and transfers
to other ships.
Lead
time. Lead time is the time difference between the
Julian date of the requisition and the required delivery date (RDD). It consists
of submission time, or the time to transmit the requisition from the
requisitioner to the stock point, plus processing and delivery time at the stock
point.
Loss
by inventory (LBI). An LBI is a decrease in the asset position
based upon a physical inventory of an ammunition item.
Maintenance
due date (MDD). The maintenance due date of a weapon is
predicated on the component of the weapon that next requires intermediate- or
depot-level maintenance or testing. MDDs vary from weapon to weapon and within
configurations of weapons. They are used to determine serviceability.
Weapons with an expired MDD are not serviceable.
National
stock number (NSN). An NSN is a 13-digit number used to identify
an item of material in the supply distribution system of the
United States
. It consists of a four-digit federal supply class (FSC) and a nine-digit
national item identification number (NIIN).
Navy
ammunition reclassification (NAR) system. NARs
provide information pertaining to the degree of serviceability of non-nuclear
explosive ordnance or explosive material used by the Navy,Marine Corps, and
Coast Guard. Reclassification refers to the change of an item's material
condition code. NARs are issued by message and often contain information
directly related to the safety of personnel and/or equipment. NARs are numbered
consecutively within each calendar year and serve as supplements to the Ammunition—
Unserviceable, Suspended, and Limited Use,
TW024-AA-ORD-010, until incorporated by a change or revision.
Receipt.
A receipt is any transaction that increases the on-hand inventory of an item,
regardless of its serviceability condition. Receipts from another ship,
activity, service, and GBIs are included.
Reconciliation.
Reconciliation is the process of reporting on-hand assets of items that have had
no transactions since the previous reconciliation.
Naval
Ammunition
Logistics
Center
Mechanicsburg uses reconciliation reports to identify and correct errors in
individual ship or activity's data files and in the CAIMS database.
Serial/lot
item tracking (SLIT). Serial/lot item tracking is a subsystem of
CAIMS that accounts for certain items of ordnance by individual serial, lot, or
register number.
Temporary
custody ashore. Temporary custody ashore refers to
ammunition temporarily stored ashore by a ship that intends to reload the
ammunition aboard at a later date. It does not include ammunition held
temporarily for further transfer (FFT).
Transaction.
For reporting purposes, a transaction is any change in the reported asset
posture of an ammunition item. Examples of transactions are receipt;
reclassification from suspended to serviceable, expenditure, and issue.
Transfer.
Transfer is the movement of assets from a Navy activity to an activity outside
the Navy accounting system such as the Army, Air Force, Coast Guard, or a
foreign government.
Type
Maintenance Due Code (TMDC). A Type Maintenance Due code is a
code that indicates what type of maintenance action is due next for an
individual item.
Unserviceable/suspended
ammunition. Unserviceable/ suspended ammunition are
components that are not ready for use and cannot be made serviceable using
immediately available maintenance
and repair capability. This includes both unserviceable items and items
suspended pending quality evaluation, test, renovation, or ammunition
reclassification. Torpedoes and missiles that are not ready for unrestricted use
or are overdue for maintenance are considered unserviceable. Unserviceable
ammunition includes Condition codes ECHO, FOXTROT, GOLF, HOTEL, JULIET, KILO,
LIMA
, MIKE, and NOVEMBER.
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