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Engineering Responsibility Matrix

This Engineering Responsibility Matrix defines and clarifies engineering responsibilities between the hardware supplier and the customer or system integrator. It is intended to reduce miscommunication, project risk, and integration delays in industrial projects.

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1. Hardware Platform

Engineering ScopeSupplierCustomer / SINotes
Hardware design & validationResponsibleNot responsibleStandard product platforms
CPU / chipset selectionResponsibleNot responsibleVerified industrial platforms
Peripheral compatibilitySharedSharedRequires joint confirmation

2. Industrial I/O & Electrical Characteristics

Engineering ScopeSupplierCustomer / SINotes
I/O electrical specificationsResponsibleNot responsibleAs per datasheet
Interface isolation (CAN / Serial)ResponsibleNot responsibleModel-dependent
Field wiring & cablingNot responsibleResponsibleSite-specific
EMI / grounding handlingNot responsibleResponsibleSystem-level responsibility

3. OS / BSP / Software

Engineering ScopeSupplierCustomer / SINotes
OS installation (Linux / Android / Windows)ResponsibleNot responsibleStandard images
BSP / driver supportResponsibleNot responsibleFor listed hardware
Kernel modificationSharedSharedOEM project scope
Application softwareNot responsibleResponsibleCustomer-owned

4. AI / Application Software (If Applicable)

Engineering ScopeSupplierCustomer / SINotes
AI hardware platformResponsibleNot responsibleCPU / NPU / GPU
SDK & inference frameworkSharedSharedOptional support
AI model training & accuracyNot responsibleResponsibleBusiness-specific
Application logicNot responsibleResponsibleCustomer scope

5. System Integration

Engineering ScopeSupplierCustomer / SINotes
Single-unit functional testResponsibleNot responsibleFactory testing
Multi-device system topologyNot responsibleResponsibleIntegration scope
PLC / camera / sensor integrationNot responsibleResponsibleSI responsibility

6. Environment & Reliability

Engineering ScopeSupplierCustomer / SINotes
Environmental testing (temp / vibration)ResponsibleNot responsibleSpecified limits
Site condition evaluationNot responsibleResponsibleReal deployment
Over-spec operationNot responsibleResponsibleOut of warranty

7. Certification & Compliance

Engineering ScopeSupplierCustomer / SINotes
CE / FCC / UKCA (unit-level)ResponsibleNot responsibleStandard compliance
System-level certificationNot responsibleResponsibleFinal product
Industry-specific certificationSharedSharedProject-based

8. Support & Lifecycle

Engineering ScopeSupplierCustomer / SINotes
Standard warrantyResponsibleNot responsibleAs published
RMA (manufacturing defects)ResponsibleNot responsibleHardware only
On-site debuggingNot responsibleResponsibleSystem-level
Long-term supplySharedSharedContract-based

This matrix is provided to support transparent engineering collaboration and does not replace formal contractual agreements.

Need to Discuss Project Responsibilities?

Our engineering team can clarify scope boundaries for your specific OEM project.

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Responsibility Matrix & Project Interface FAQs

Why is a formal responsibility matrix critical for industrial pilot line projects?

Industrial projects involve complex intersections between hardware, software, and mechanical integration. A formal matrix prevents "scope creep" and "responsibility gaps" by clearly defining who manages firmware validation,現場 (on-site) fieldbus tuning, and data layer integration, ensuring no task falls between the cracks during high-pressure pilot phases.

How does BITECH define the hardware-software integration boundary?

We define the boundary at the driver and middleware level. BITECH typically holds responsibility for the hardware abstraction layer (HAL), BSP stability, and CAN Bus/Fieldbus interface hardware validation, while the client or integrator manages the upper-level application logic and specific SCADA integration rules.

Who is responsible for EMI/EMC compliance validation on-site?

BITECH provides hardware that meets specified EMI/EMC standards (e.g., industrial CE/FCC). However, onsite system-level integration compliance is a joint responsibility. We provide the technical documentation and shielding guidelines for the integration, while the system integrator manages the actual cabinet-level wiring and physical grounding implementation.

How are firmware updates managed during the pilot validation phase?

During pilot validation, BITECH provides version-controlled firmware images. The responsibility matrix designates BITECH as the owner of the core BSP and stability updates, while the client manages the deployment timeline to ensure updates align with pilot test windows without disrupting ongoing production validation.

What happens if there is a conflict in fieldbus communication?

Our responsibility matrix categorizes fieldbus issues. If the issue is related to the physical layer (e.g., hardware-level signal loss), BITECH takes the lead in troubleshooting. If it is an application-layer data protocol conflict, BITECH provides the technical API documentation and protocol logs to assist the client’s software team in rapid root cause identification.

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