CP189 has primarily resided in the nuclear world/section XI. CP189 is fatally flawed. If your weld inspector A, trained in 1970, then more than likely those who trained you are either dead or dieing, or the company that trained you was bought/sold so many times it's unrecognizable. Either way, traceability is lost. Maybe if you had a notary public of the time notorize your training and experience documents, but other than that, there is no way to verify the authenticity of such documents. This is more and more the case in the nuclear industry, and why CP189 as written will eventually die. Any other attempt at document verification opens the door to fraud. Any two bit idiot with a computer and criminal intent can dummy up papers to companies that don't exist any more or never existed. How is anyone going to know the difference without an expensive background check?
I've reviewed for approval many cert packs and have seen my share of false documentation.
It is my opinion that the time has come for a performance based certification scheme rather than a pile of worthless paper. Even in regards to that, programs such as the CWI program should have an entrance performance exam in my opinion. Some level of knowledge should be inherent before sitting down for a seminar/test. If that minimal knowledge was not present, then something is wrong with the paper work testifying to 5 years experience in my opinion. This is also a problem with the CSWIP, and ASNT ACCP program.
Why waste time testing someone like that?
Regards,
Gerald
ASNT CP-189 was approved by the ASNT Board of Directors in January, 1989 as a standard for the qualification and certification of NDT personnel. The intent was to produce a new document that provided strict requirements rather than simply guidelines. ASNT obtained ANSI accreditation to process this document through a consensus balloting process that would recognize ASNT CP-189 as a national standard. The first successful consensus document became the ANSI/ASNT CP-189-1996.
MDK