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Free for NDT inspection companies — user ID only

Free Equipment Management for NDT Companies in Bath, ME

Track every usn shipbuilding inspection instrument, alert on every calibration due-date, and prove cert traceability against NAVSEA T9074 — free for Bath, ME inspection companies. Built around real Bath workflows: Bath Iron Works (General Dynamics) and other named local facilities.

Written by NDT Connect Editorial · Atlantis NDT — ASNT Level III review · Last updated 2026-04-26

The Bath, ME NDT inspection landscape

Bath sits at the centre of USN shipbuilding, Heavy fabrication. Inspection contractors operating in Bath, ME work under NAVSEA T9074, ABS, AWS D1.1 compliance regimes and routinely mobilise to facilities like Bath Iron Works (General Dynamics).

The dominant NDT-spend industries here are usn shipbuilding and heavy fabrication, which means most inspection workloads cluster around UT thickness, MT, PT, RT for class welds. Crews running these methods need calibration records that travel with the instrument from job to job, and personnel certifications that pass customer audits without a 48-hour scramble before mobilisation.

"BIW destroyer construction packs NDT scopes into a tight Maine winter schedule — an out-of-cal UT unit during a pre-launch hull survey reshuffles the entire ship's delivery curve."

Why Bath crews use the equipment registry

Because Bath's NDT demand sits in USN shipbuilding and Heavy fabrication, the methods that drive billable hours here lean toward UT thickness, MT, PT, RT for class welds. Equipment registries and calibration alerts in Bath are most useful when they cover this exact mix without forcing crews to track method-irrelevant instruments.

  • Equipment registry with serial numbers, manufacturer, model, status — covers UT, RT, MT, PT, ET, VT, hardness, borescope, and reference-block hardware.
  • Calibration due-date tracking on every instrument, with status badges (Active, In Calibration, Out of Service, Retired).
  • Notes field per instrument — log repair history, customer-specific qualifications, and on-job assignments.
  • Export the full equipment register for client audits and pre-job submissions.
  • Cross-link instruments to live calibration alerts so a single change propagates to your scheduling.

NDT methods most used in Bath

Based on the city's industrial substrate, the highest-volume inspection methods for Bath, ME contractors are:

UT thickness
MT
PT
RT for class welds
UT
RT
VT

Method coverage in equipment management extends across the full ASNT SNT-TC-1A list — UT, RT, MT, PT, ET, VT, LT, AE, GWT, PAUT, TOFD, DR, CR, CT, NR, IR, MFL, VA — plus shearography, hardness, PMI, RFT, ACFM. Custom methods (proprietary or customer-specific) can be added at the account level.

Your first 30 minutes with the equipment registry in Bath

A typical Bath usn shipbuilding contractor goes from sign-up to a working dashboard in under 30 minutes. Here is the path most users follow.

  1. 1. Sign in and import your Bath equipment

    Create a free user ID, drop in your existing equipment list (CSV import or one-by-one), and tag each instrument with its current location — Bath Iron Works (General Dynamics), your shop, or in calibration.

  2. 2. Tag instruments by usn shipbuilding job type

    Add tags so a quick filter shows only the kit relevant to usn shipbuilding work in Bath. Most contractors find their first 30 instruments cover 80% of jobs in this market.

  3. 3. Set calibration due-dates

    Each instrument gets a calibration due-date and reference to the cal certificate. The dashboard auto-flags items expiring within 30, 60, or 90 days.

  4. 4. Connect cert to instrument

    Link each instrument to the personnel certification required to operate it (e.g., a phased-array unit links to a Level II UT-PA cert). When the cert expires, the instrument flips status — preventing the misuse before audit catches it.

  5. 5. Export pre-job package

    One click produces a customer-ready pre-job package: equipment list, calibration status, personnel cert summary. Drop it into the USN shipbuilding customer's procurement portal in under 2 minutes.

Calibration interval reference for Bath, ME

Calibration intervals are governed by the most-restrictive of: manufacturer recommendation, code requirement, customer specification, and your own written practice. The table below lists the typical floor for instruments common in Bath usn shipbuilding work.

InstrumentCode referenceTypical interval
UT Thickness GaugeASME Section V Article 4 + manufacturerDaily field check; full calibration 6–12 months
UT Flaw DetectorASME Section V Article 4 (T-461 family) + procedureDaily linearity check; reference-block verification each shift; full cal annually
Magnetic YokeASTM E709 / ASME Section V Article 7Lifting-power check before each shift; full cal annually
PT Consumables (penetrant, developer, remover)ASTM E1417 / E165Each batch verified to known reference panel; replace per shelf-life

Verify against the latest edition of each code and your customer's specific procedure. The free calibration tracker enforces the most-restrictive interval automatically when you record both the manufacturer and the customer requirement.

Bath customer audits — when they happen and what they catch

Bath inspection contractors typically face customer audits aligned with the USN shipbuilding cycle — class-society survey schedules drive audit cadence — typically annual / intermediate / special-survey 5-year cycles. In every case, equipment calibration logs and personnel certification expiry are the two most-frequently-cited audit findings.

Most-cited audit findings on USN shipbuilding jobs

  1. Expired personnel certification on a tech who showed up to the job site (the most common Bath audit finding across every industry).
  2. Calibration certificate not retrievable in under 5 minutes — auditors will write this up as a system-level deficiency, not just a missing-document finding.
  3. Equipment calibration overdue for an instrument that is "in calibration" status but has been at the lab > 30 days with no return date.
  4. Reference-block verification not logged for the shift on which the work was performed.
  5. Customer-specific qualification (above and beyond ASNT) not tracked separately — common when serving multiple usn shipbuilding customers with overlapping but non-identical requirements.

Code authorities and named facilities served from Bath

Code authorities operating here

  • NAVSEA T9074
  • ABS
  • AWS D1.1

Named facilities (representative)

  • Bath Iron Works (General Dynamics)USN destroyer builder (DDG-51 / DDG-1000)

Bath NDT contractor compliance checklist

The 8–10 items below summarise what auditors and customers in Bath, ME expect from a compliant NDT contractor. The free tools cover the data-tracking layer; written practice and procedure-level compliance remain your responsibility.

  • Every instrument shipping to a Bath job site has a current calibration certificate retrievable in under 5 minutes.
  • Every technician on the qualified-vendor list has a valid ASNT or ISO 9712 cert covering the methods they will perform.
  • Reference-block verification logged for the shift on which work is performed.
  • Calibration interval matches the most-restrictive of: manufacturer recommendation, code requirement, customer specification, written practice.
  • Customer-specific qualifications (beyond ASNT baseline) tracked as a separate field per technician.
  • Equipment calibration certificates traceable to NIST or equivalent national metrology body.
  • Records retained for the period specified in customer contract or applicable code (commonly 5–10 years for industrial; longer for nuclear / aerospace).
  • Out-of-tolerance findings on calibration trigger a back-trace to all reports issued since the previous in-tolerance calibration.

Related resources for Bath, ME

Frequently asked questions about equipment management in Bath, ME

Is the equipment management tool actually free for Bath, ME NDT companies?

Yes. There is no credit-card requirement, no trial expiry, and no per-instrument or per-user fee. Inspection companies in Bath, ME create a free user ID and use the tool as long as the account exists.

Will it work for the usn shipbuilding workflow specific to Bath?

Bath, ME usn shipbuilding crews routinely work under NAVSEA T9074, ABS, AWS D1.1. The tool's data fields (calibration intervals, cert types, audit-trail exports) match what those codes require — and where a customer adds supplemental requirements (e.g. Bath Iron Works (General Dynamics) above-and-beyond audit clauses) the custom-field functionality lets you track them too.

What inspection methods are supported?

All ASNT SNT-TC-1A methods: UT, RT, MT, PT, ET, VT, LT, AE, GWT, PAUT, TOFD, DR, CR, CT, NR, IR, MFL, VA, plus shearography, hardness, PMI, RFT, ACFM. Custom methods can be added per-account if your Bath workflow includes proprietary or customer-specific methods.

How does it integrate with our existing ERP or job-tracking software?

Today the tool exports CSV / PDF on demand for both equipment and certifications. Direct API integration is on the roadmap. Bath contractors using mid-tier ERPs typically run a weekly export-import cadence; that's enough to keep both systems aligned.

Is data stored in the cloud or on my device?

Today, equipment and calibration records persist in your browser (localStorage). They do not leave your device. Cloud-sync is on the near-term roadmap and will be opt-in and remain free for the basic tier. Personnel certifications already sync to the user account on the server.

What if my Bath crew works at multiple facilities — including Bath Iron Works (General Dynamics)?

Each instrument or technician carries a location tag. A filter on the dashboard answers "what's at Bath Iron Works (General Dynamics) today" instantly. The tool was built for multi-site fleets — the typical Bath usn shipbuilding contractor runs equipment across 3-8 customer sites simultaneously.

How do customer audits in Bath typically use this data?

Most USN shipbuilding customers in this market audit on three pillars: equipment calibration (every instrument cited in a report must show current cal at time of work), personnel cert (Level + method + expiry must be valid at the work date), and procedure / written-practice. The tool gives you the first two on demand.

Does it cover NAVSEA T9074 requirements specifically?

Yes. NAVSEA T9074 traceability requires equipment calibration records back to manufacturer or NIST source, plus personnel records back to ASNT or ISO 9712. The tool keeps both in audit-export-ready form. Bath customers operating under NAVSEA T9074 have used the records produced by this tool in regulator audits.

Can I track company-level certifications too?

Yes — ISO 9001, ISO 17025, ISO 17020, NADCAP, AS9100, API Q1/Q2, classification societies (ABS, DNV, LR, etc.), and aerospace prime authorisations (Boeing D6, Airbus AIPI/AIPS, Lockheed approvals, Pratt & Whitney, Rolls-Royce SABRe, GE Aviation). Custom company certs can be added per-account.

What does "user ID only" really mean?

Email + password. We don't ask for company info, payment info, or a corporate vetting form to get started. You can add company info later if you want to appear in the Bath provider directory, but it's optional for the free tools.

How does this compare to paid software like Cority, Inspectionware, or Tridiagonal?

Those are full enterprise platforms (procedure authoring, customer portals, ERP-grade scheduling) and start at $30-200 per seat per month. The free tools cover the table-stakes traceability layer — equipment, calibration, certs — that small and mid-size Bath contractors need before they can justify an enterprise platform. Many shops use the free tools indefinitely; some graduate to paid systems as they scale.

What happens to my data if NDT Connect changes the free tier?

The free tier of these three tools (equipment, calibration, certificate management) is committed indefinitely. If we ever change the terms, existing data exports remain available and account holders get 12 months notice. We don't lock data in.

Free for Bath, ME inspection companies

Create a user ID and start tracking your Bath fleet today. No credit card. No trial expiry. Built for usn shipbuilding crews working under NAVSEA T9074 and audited by usn destroyer builder (ddg-51 / ddg-1000) customers.

Create your free user ID

Last updated 2026-04-26 · Reviewed for Bath, ME