Services
Inventory Management Systems
AEROSPACE
METRIC FASTENERS (AMF), use the last technology methods
for the inventories management, and we have the responsibility for the
stocks maintenance to keep the correct levels, in order to facilitate
and assist you in your production process. By this way the purchases,
receptions and inspections can be reduced.
The inventory control systems and other services that we use are as follow:
(Some of them still in introduction process).
Request for Quotation
Please fulfill your request with the following data:
E-Commerce
Herein
we shall provide full information regarding
the E-COMMERCE, how operates
and also how can be applied in our specific and particular type of business.
We shall specify the advantage that offers for the buyer and for the
seller,
as well as the warranty for the client such as: Data Protection,
Electronic Certification, Client Protection, etc.
Actually it is under construction and configuration and as soon as finished,
then will be included in this page for an easy and secure use and procedure.
Glossary
For courtesy of Aerospace Metric Fasteners, we offer you the GLOSSARY of Internet most used words.
* Accessibility
* ADSL (Asymetric Digital Suscriber Line)
* Authentification
* Bandwidth
* Bombing or Mail bombing
* Browser
* Channel
* CGI
* Cookies
* Database
* Decryptation
* DNS (Domain Name system)
* Domain (or Domain Name)
* DSL
* e-commerce
* e-mail
* Encryption
* Firewall
* Forum
* FTP
* Gopher
* Hypertext
* HTLM
* Hosting
* IANA
* ICANN
* Internet (a.k.a. Cyberspace)
* Internic (Internet Network Información Center)
* Intranet
* IP
* IP Address
* ISP (Internet Service Provider)
* LAN (Local Area Network)
* List server
* Mailing list
* Majordomo
* NIC-España
* Newsgroup
* On-line
* Real-Time Instant Verification (e-commerce)
* Secure Socket Layer (SSL)
* Secure Website (e-commerce)
* Server
* Shopping cart (e-commerce)
* Site (Website)
* TCP protocol
* Telnet
* URL (Uniform Resources Locator)
* WAIS WAIS
* WWW (World Wide Web
Accessibility.- The quality of a system incorporating hardware or software that makes it usable by people with one or more physical disabilities, such as restricted mobility, blindness, or deafness.
ADSL (Asymetric Digital Suscriber Line).- ADSL connections offer you fast speeds and great benefits. There are several different "flavors" of DSL: ADSL, HDSL, IDSL, SDSL, and others. They are often referred to as "xDSL". The most common DSL service for home use is Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL). Usually the "A" is dropped. So when we talk about DSL for home use, we're talking about ADSL. The asymmetric part of ADSL refers to the different bandwidths for sending and receiving data. Data is sent "upstream" to the Internet and "downstream" from the Internet. The amount of data that you send upstream (for example, when you send a URL to the Internet) is a great deal less than the amount of data sent downstream (for example, a Web page with images, sound, and text). So ADSL allots less bandwidth for upstream data and more for downstream where you really need it. See also DSL.
ASCII.- Acronym for the
"American Standard Code for Information Interchange". Pronounced
"ask-ee", ASCII is a code for representing English characters
as numbers, with each letter assigned a number from 0 to 127. For example,
the ASCII code for uppercase M is 77. Most computers use ASCII codes to
represent text, which makes it possible to transfer data from one computer
to another.
The standard ASCII character set uses just 7 bits for each character.
There are several larger character sets that use 8 bits, which gives them
128 additional characters. The extra characters are used to represent
non-English characters, graphics symbols, and mathematical symbols. Several
companies and organizations have proposed extensions for these 128 characters.
The DOS operating system uses a superset of ASCII called extended ASCII
or high ASCII. A more universal standard is the ISO Latin 1 set of characters,
which is used by many operating systems, as well as Web browsers.
The ASCII code is included in every PC. It was developed in 1968.
ASP.- Active Page Server. A specification for a dynamically created Web page with a .ASP extension that utilizes ActiveX scripting -- usually VB Script or Jscript code. When a browser requests an ASP page, the Web server generates a page with HTML code and sends it back to the browser. So ASP pages are similar to CGI scripts, but they enable Visual Basic programmers to work with familiar tools
Authentification.- The process of identifying an individual, usually based on a username and password. In security systems, authentication is distinct from authorization , which is the process of giving individuals access to system objects based on their identity. Authentication merely ensures that the individual is who he or she claims to be, but says nothing about the access rights of the individual.
Bandwidth.- A measurement
of the volume of information that can be transmitted over a network at
a given time. Think of a network as a water pipe - the higher the bandwidth
(the larger the diameter of the pipe), the more data (water) can pass
over the network (through the pipe).
Technically bandwidth is the difference between the upper frequency and
the lower frequency in any carrier.
Bombing or Mail bombing.-
The sending of a great deal of messages (usually aggressive), or big,
meaningless files by one or more senders to an e-mail address, collapsing
the mailbox to which they are sent.
A typical case is when those messages are sent to the senders of unsolicited
e-mails (spam mail).
Browser.- Short for Web browser, a software application used to locate and display Web pages. The two most popular browsers are Netscape Navigator and Microsoft Internet Explorer. Both of these are graphical browsers, which means that they can display graphics as well as text. In addition, most modern browsers can present multimedia information, including sound and video.
Channel.- In communications, the term channel refers to a communications path between two computers or devices. It can refer to the physical medium (the wires) or to a set of properties that distinguishes one channel from another. For example, TV channels refer to particular frequencies at which radio waves are transmitted.
CGI.- Abbreviation of Common Gateway Interface, a specification for transferring information between a World Wide Web server and a CGI program. A CGI program is any program designed to accept and return data that conforms to the CGI specification. The program could be written in any programming language, including C, Perl, Java, or Visual Basic.
Cookies.- Cookies are small
text files a site can use to recognize repeat users, facilitate the user's
ongoing access to and use of the site and allow a site to track usage
behavior and compile aggregate data that will allow content improvements
and targeted advertising. Generally, cookies work by assigning a unique
number to the user that has no meaning outside the assigning site.
If a user does not want information collected through the use of cookies,
there is a simple procedure in most browsers that allows the user to deny
or accept the cookie feature.
You can configure your browser to accept all cookies, reject all cookies,
or notify you when a cookie is set. (Each browser is different, so check
the "Help" menu of your browser to learn how to change your
cookies preferences.)
When a user first visits a site, this usually generates and sends a cookie.
Without this identification many sites cannot be visited. Users having
their browser configured not to allow cookies will receive a warning message
when they try entering these sites.
A user to be able to work with these sites should configure his browser
to accept cookies. By default, both Microsoft Explorer and Netscape Navigator
accept cookies.
Cookies are not programs that come onto a user's system and damage files.
You can configure your browser to accept cookies, reject all of the cookies
or being previously warned when a cookie is received so you can accept
it or reject it.
To configure "Microsoft Explorer" for cookies.
* Select View from the main menu. Intenet dialog box appears. Click Advanced
tab. Scroll down to Always Accept Cookies check box. Click on the check
box. A check mark displays when the option is active.
To configure "Netscape Navigator" for cookies.
* Select Edit>Preferences from the Main Menu. Click the Advanced category
from the category listing "cookies". Click the first radio button
option. Click the first radio button option, Always Accept Cookies. When
selected the option is active.
Database.- What is a database?
Think of a database as a sophisticated version of an index card file For
instance, a product list consists of index card files in alphabetical
order by product reference number. Each card contains the product description,
its list price, the existing stock, etc.
In database terminology, each product's card is called a record. Together,
all the cards in the index file are called a table, or record source.
Each item on a card is called a field. So, the reference number is considered
one field, the list price, another field, and so on.
In a database, the fields are broken into two parts: the field label,
which identifies the field (for example, List Price) and the field value,
which is the actual data in the field (for example, $75).
A database can have multiple tables. For example, in addition to the product
card file, you might also have card files for customers and suppliers.
You can store them as additional tables in the same database.
A database can also have multiple views. A view has records and fields
just like a table, but it can contain information from different tables.
A view used also to be called a query, and it can accept parameters that
change the information it displays.
Decryptation.- See Encryptation.
DNS (Domain Name system).- DNS is the system used
in Internet to assign and use univocal names for the computers conneted
to the network.
In the first level are the TLD's Top Level Domains, one per country (two
letters, for instance, .es for Spain or .us for the United States) plus
three-letter special ones as .com, .net or .org. See also Domain Names.
Domain (or Domain Name).-
The "address" in Internet identifying the owner of that location
in the format:
server.organization.type
For instance,
www.aerofastening.com
identifies the Webserver aerofastening, belonging to AEROSPACE METRIC
FASTENERS, S.L., forming part of the domains assigned to the business
organization. (See also URL).
DSL.- DSL is a new technology that uses the existing POTS (Plain Old Telephone Service) lines you have in your home. Your POTS lines carry analog signals-voice, fax, and dial–up modem. ADSL shares the line with the analog signal by using a different frequency range. So analog signals and ADSL data signals can be transmitted at the same time. The benefit is you can talk on the phone and surf the Web at the same time, using the same telephone line besides the fact that DSL can bring you the Internet to your home up to 25 times faster than a standard dial-up connection (depending on the distance from your home to the DSL central (it should be less than 15,000 feet for DSL service to be available. The closer your home is to the DSL central, the greater the available speed will be) . See also ADSL.
e-commerce.- Browsing articles and shopping them from any computer connected to the Internet network.
e-mail.- Short for electronic
mail, the transmission of messages over communications networks. The messages
can be notes entered from the keyboard or electronic files stored on disk.
E-mail enables users to send electronic mail anywhere in the world. Companies
that are fully computerized make extensive use of e-mail because it is
fast, flexible, and reliable.
You send the message to the recipient by specifying the recipient's address.
You can also send the same message to several users at once.
my-name@my-department.my-company.com
user domain sparator
An email message can be a text message but it also can attach files, like
image files, sound files, executable files, etc.
Special care should be taken using uppercase or lowercase characters.
The domain part of an email address is indifferent to using uppercase
but not the user part.
Sent messages are stored in electronic mailboxes until the recipient fetches
them. To see if you have any mail, you may have to check your electronic
mailbox periodically, although many systems alert you when mail is received.
After reading your mail, you can store it, forward it to other users,
or delete it. Copies of memos can be printed out on a printer if you want
a paper copy.
In recent years, the use of e-mail has exploded. By some estimates, there
are now 25 million e-mail users sending 15 billion messages per year.
Encryption.- Encryption
is the process of transforming information before communicating it to
make it unintelligible to all but the intended recipient. Encryption employs
mathematical formulas called cryptographic algorithms, or ciphers, and
numbers called keys, to encrypt or decrypt information.
An encryption system in which the sender and receiver of a message share
a single, common key that is used to encrypt and decrypt the message is
called symmetric encryption. Contrast this with public-key encryption,
which utilizes two keys - a public key to encrypt messages and a private
key to decrypt them.
Symmetric-key systems are simpler and faster, but their main drawback
is that the two parties must somehow exchange the key in a secure way.
Public-key encryption avoids this problem because the public key can be
distributed in a non-secure way, and the private key is never transmitted.
Firewall.- A system designed to prevent unauthorized access to or from a private network. Firewalls can be implemented in both hardware and software, or a combination of both. Firewalls are frequently used to prevent unauthorized Internet users from accessing private networks connected to the Internet, especially intranets. All messages entering or leaving the intranet pass through the firewall, which examines each message and blocks those that do not meet the specified security criteria.
Forum- See newsgroup.
FTP.- FTP stands for File
Transfer Protocol. A protocol is a language that enables computers to
speak to one another. FTP is used to make files and folders publicly available
for transfer over the Internet. In some cases you may need to get permission
from the network computer's administrator to log on and gain access to
files on the computer. But often you'll find that you can use FTP to gain
access to certain networks or servers without having an account, or being
an official password holder, with that computer. These "anonymous"
FTP servers can contain a broad range of data that is publicly available
through FTP.
The Internet address (URL) for an FTP server looks slightly different
from the URL you use for a typical Web page.
How much access you have to files and folders on FTP servers depends on
whether you gain access to the servers through a CERN proxy server or
directly, and what kind of permissions you have with the FTP server.
Access through a CERN proxy server is limited to viewing or downloading
files. You cannot rename, upload, or delete files or folders through a
CERN proxy server as you can through other types of proxy servers.
If you gain access to FTP sites directly, you can work with files and
folders on the FTP servers much like you work with them on your own computer.
You can view, download, upload, rename, and delete files and folders.
If you need permission from the FTP server to perform any of these actions,
you will be prompted to provide your username and password.
Gopher.- A system that pre-dates the World Wide Web for organizing and displaying files on Internet servers. A Gopher server presents its contents as a hierarchically structured list of files. With the ascendance of the Web, most Gopher databases are being converted to Web sites which can be more easily accessed via Web search engines.
Hypertext.- A document that contains links to other documents, commonly seen in Web pages and help files.
HTLM.- Short for HyperText Markup Language, the authoring language used to create documents on the World Wide Web. HTML defines the structure and layout of a Web document by using a variety of tags and attributes. There are hundreds of HTML tags used to format and layout the information in a Web page.
Hosting.- Installing and
keeping a website in a server computer permanently connected to the Internet
network so, it can be visited by anybody at anytime.
Big corporations use to have servers of their own, but individuals and
small business use to hire disk space from Internet Service Providers
(ISPs), sharing servers with other's sites, but avoiding the big cost
of having dedicated servers, communication lines, skilled maintenance
personnel, etc.
IANA.- Short for Internet Assigned Numbers Authority, an organization working under the auspices of the Internet Architecture Board (IAB) that is responsible for assigning new Internet-wide IP addresses.
ICANN.- ICANN (Internet
Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers) was created by the late Jon
Postel in the fall of 1998 in response to a policy statement issued by
the US Department of Commerce. This statement called for the formation
of a private sector not-for-profit Internet stakeholder to administer
policy for the Internet name and address system.
Thus far ICANN has taken various measures to oversee the domain-name registration
system's transition from government hands to private hands and to coordinate
the its decentralization and integration into a global community.
Internet (a.k.a. Cyberspace).-
The worldwide collection of computers, networks and gateways that use
TCP/IP protocols to communicate with one another. At the heart of the
Internet are high-speed data communication lines between major host computers,
consisting of thousands of commercial, government, educational, and other
computer systems that route data and messages. Currently, the Internet
offers a range of services to users, such as e-mail, the World Wide Web,
FTP, Usenet newsgroups, Gopher, IRC, telnet, and others.
Recently, everyone seems to have heard about the Internet, but did you
know that the net has been around since 1969? The Internet as we know
it today, in the mid-1990s, traces it origins back to a Defense Department
project in 1969.
Of at least as much interest as Internet's technical progress in the 1990s
has been its sociological progress. It has already become part of everyday
vocabulary, and seems headed for even greater prominence. It has been
accepted by the business community, with a resulting explosion of service
providers, consultants, books, and TV coverage.
But now the big questions loom unanswered:
How will society change the Internet... and how will the Internet change
society?
Internic (Internet Network Información
Center).- A collaborative project between AT&T and Network
Solutions, Inc. (NSI) supported by the National Science Foundation. The
project currently offers the following four services to users of the Internet.
* InterNIC Directory and Database Services - online white pages directory
and directory of publicly accessible databases managed by AT&T.
* Registration Services - domain name and IP address assignment managed
by NSI.
* Support Services - outreach, education, and information services for
the Internet community managed by NSI.
* Net Scout Services - online publications that summarize recent happenings
of interest to Internet users (managed by NSI).
Intranet.- A network based
on TCP/IP protocols (an Internet) belonging to an organization, usually
a corporation, accessible only by the organization's members, employees,
or others with authorization. An intranet's Web sites look and act just
like any other Web sites, but the firewall surrounding an intranet fends
off unauthorized access.
Like the Internet itself, intranets are used to share information. Secure
intranets are now the fastest-growing segment of the Internet because
they are much less expensive to build and manage than private networks
based on proprietary protocols.
IP.- Abbreviation of Internet
Protocol, pronounced as two separate letters. IP specifies the format
of packets, also called datagrams, and the addressing scheme. Most networks
combine IP with a higher-level protocol called Transport Control Protocol
(TCP), which establishes a virtual connection between a destination and
a source.
IP by itself is something like the postal system. It allows you to address
a package and drop it in the system, but there's no direct link between
you and the recipient. TCP/IP, on the other hand, establishes a connection
between two hosts computers so that they can send messages back and forth
for a period of time.
IP Address.- When your web browser or email application request a resource or email from another computer on the Internet, it automatically gives that computer the address where it should send the information. This is called your computer’s "IP address" (Internet Protocol address). For most users accessing the Internet from a dial-up Internet service provider (ISP), the IP address will be different every you log on.
ISP (Internet Service Provider).-
Companies or organizations that, usually for a small monthly charge connect
their customes, through dial-up connections to their computers, to the
Internet network.
Besides supplying access to the Internet they use to offer other services
as website hosting, e-mail accounts, etc.
LAN (Local Area Network).-
A computer network that spans a relatively small area. Most LANs are confined
to a single building or group of buildings. However, one LAN can be connected
to other LANs over any distance via telephone lines and radio waves. A
system of LANs connected in this way is called a wide-area network (WAN).
See also Intranet.
Linux.- Pronounced lee-nucks. A freely-distributable open source implementation
of UNIX (open code anybody can modify), created by the Finnish Linus Torvalds
in 1991.
List server.- A server that manages mailing lists for groups of users. Two of the most popular mailing list server systems for the Internet are Listserv and Majordomo.
Mailing list.- A list of
e-mail addresses identified by a single name, such as info@aerofastening.com.
When an e-mail message is sent to the mailing list name, it is automatically
forwarded to all the addresses in the list.
Usually, the users of a mailing list is people sharing same likings or
belonging to the same profession. They change news, send questions, information
or tips
A user can passively join a mailing list (simply reading the messages
sent by others) or actively, sending messages or questions.
One of the advantages of belonging to one of this lists is, for instance,
when you are looking for the solution to any problem. Usually the answer
comes very quickly. Remember that the users of these lists are similar
people from everywhere in the world.
Many of these lists are monitored by an individual or group (the moderator),
who has the authority to block messages deemed inappropriate avoiding
this way, for instance, spam messages.
Majordomo.- A free mailing
list server that runs under UNIX. When e-mail is addressed to a Majordomo
mailing list, it is automatically broadcast to everyone on the list. The
result is similar to a newsgroup or forum, except that the messages are
transmitted as e-mail and are therefore available only to individuals
on the list. This program has been written in PERL programming language.
Another popular mailing list server is LISTSERV.
NIC-España.- The official organism appointed to registry domain names under the TLD .es for España.
Newsgroup.- Same as forum, an on-line discussion group. On the Internet, there are literally thousands of newsgroups covering every conceivable interest. To view and post messages to a newsgroup, you need a news reader, a program that runs on your computer and connects you to a news server on the Internet.
On-line.- Turned on and
connected. For example, printers are on-line when they are ready to receive
data from the computer. You can also turn a printer off-line. While the
printer is off-line, you can perform certain tasks such as advancing the
paper, but you cannot send data to it. Most printers have an on-line button
you can press to turn the machine on- or off-line.
Users are considered on-line when they are connected to the Internet network.
That is, they are actually on the line.
Increasingly, the term is being spelled as one word, online, when used
as an adjective and hyphenated, on-line, when used as a noun.
We say that any activity is carried out "on-line" when we need
to make use of the Internet network to manage it.
Real-Time Instant Verification (e-commerce).-
It means that when a customer enters his or her credit card information,
your "E-commerce" site connects to the appropriate financial
institution and verifies the customer's credit card account and amount
being charged. Once this verification processing is complete, it notifies
the customer and either accepts or declines the purchase transaction.
If the purchase transaction is accepted, the funds needed for the purchase
are automatically deposited into your bank account. This saves you time
and maximizes your availability of funds.
Real- Time Transaction (e-commerce).- See "Real Time Instant Verification".
Resource.- usually, any file which could be a text file, graphics, sound,
image or a composition of the ones above and placed in a web site.
Secure Socket Layer (SSL).-
Short for Secure Sockets Layer, a protocol developed by Netscape for transmitting
private documents via the Internet. SSL works by using a private key to
encrypt data that's transferred over the SSL connection. Both Netscape
Navigator and Internet Explorer support SSL, and many Web sites use the
protocol to obtain confidential user information, such as credit card
numbers. By convention, Web pages that require an SSL connection start
with https: instead of http:.
With the current technology, a hacker will need a trillion of trillion
of years to decode the current encrytation standard of 128 bits.
Secure Website (e-commerce).-
Server.- Any computer connected
to the Internet and with the proper software to host sites.
Thanks to the worldwide database "Whois", any person clicking
your domain name will gain quick access to your site in that server.
Shopping cart (e-commerce).-
The set of applications or software in a e-commerce site that, to the
user appears as a list containing the products or services he/she has
so far selected, including quantities of each, partial and total prices,
S/H cost, taxes, etc, but without having done the final check-out yet.
Shopping carts can be sold as independent pieces of software so companies
can integrate them into their own unique online solution, or they can
be offered as a feature from a service that will create and host a company's
e-commerce site.
Site (Website).- A place
on the Internet made of different linked resources, in which anybody can
browse or pick information.
All of these worldwide sites, linked each other, make the "World
Wide Web", Internet network, or simply the "Web".
Spam mail.- Electronic junk mail or junk newsgroup postings. Some people
define spam even more generally as any unsolicited e-mail. However, if
a long-lost brother finds your e-mail address and sends you a message,
this could hardly be called spam, even though it's unsolicited. Real spam
is generally e-mail advertising for some product sent to a mailing list
or newsgroup.
In addition to wasting people's time with unwanted e-mail, spam also eats
up a lot of network bandwidth. Consequently, there are many organizations,
as well as individuals, who have taken it upon themselves to fight spam
with a variety of techniques. But because the Internet is public, there
is really little that can be done to prevent spam, just as it is impossible
to prevent junk mail. However, some private online services have instituted
policies to prevent spammers from spamming their subscribers.
Statement of Privacy (a.k.a. Privacy Policy).- a statement on a web site
describing what information about you is collected by the site, and how
it is used. Ideally, the policy is posted prominently and offers you options
about the use of your personal information. These options are called "opt-in"
and "opt-out".
An "opt-in" choice means the web site will not use your information
unless you specifically say it is okay.
An "opt-out" choice means the web site can use the information
unless you specifically direct it not to.
TCP protocol.- Abbreviation of Transmission Control Protocol, and pronounced as separate letters. TCP is one of the main protocols in TCP/IP networks. Whereas the IP protocol deals only with packets, TCP enables two hosts computers to establish a connection and exchange streams of data. TCP guarantees delivery of data and also guarantees that packets will be delivered in the same order in which they were sent.
Telnet.- Virtual Terminal. Telnet is a program that let you open a session (login) in a remote computer. In most of cases, Telnet effect the emulation of a terminal type VT100.
URL (Uniform Resources Locator).-
The Internet address allowing you to reach any resource in the web (webpage,
text document, graphical document, etc.) in Internet.
The URL is the standard way of naming any resource in Internet, is like
the phone number of any person you wish to talk to.
The first part of any URL (before the double slash //) is telling the
resource type (or access method) to that address:
* http: A hypertext document or directory.
* gopher: A Gopher directory or menu.
* ftp: A file ready to be copied.
* news: A group of news.
* telnet: A computer system we can access from Internet.
* WAIS: (Wide Area Information Server). A data base telling where the
information is located in Internet.
* file: A file in a local drive.
The second part of any URL is, in general, the address of the computer
where the data or service is located. Another additional parts can specify
filenames, the connexion port or a text to be search in a database.
Important: If we wrongly write any URL, our browser will not be able to
locate the server or resource we want.
Example:
http://www.aerofastening.com
The part of an address regarding the server is structured in blocks separated
by dots, being from left to right from the most specific data (low level
domain, i.e. aerofastening) to the most generic ones (top level domains,
i.e. .com).
These top level domains (TLDs) can be three letter domains as the ones
which follow (some of the for the use of the U.S. Government only):
All of the federal agencies end with .gov.
For the military .mil is reserved.
Education or research organizations end in .edu.
Non profit organizations, business administrations and particulars end
in .org.
.com is normally used by profit organization or business.
.net is normally assigned to companies giving support to Internet.
There also two-letter TLDs, assigned to each country of the world, so,
for instance, .es is the TDL assigned to Spain, .fr the one assigned to
France or .us the one assigned to the U.S. Every country regulates the
assignment of these TLDs.
Due to the current limitations, recently new TLDs have been created.
(see also "Domain name").
WAIS.- Short for Wide Area Information Server, and pronounced ways, a program for finding documents on the Internet. WAIS is rather primitive in its search capabilities.
WAIS.- See LAN.
WWW (World Wide Web).-
A system of Internet servers that support specially formatted documents.
The documents are formatted in a language called HTML (HyperText Markup
Language) that supports links to other documents, as well as graphics,
audio, and video files. This means you can jump from one document to another
simply by clicking on hot spots. Not all Internet servers are part of
the World Wide Web.
There are several applications called Web browsers that make it easy to
access the World Wide Web; Two of the most popular being Netscape Navigator
and Microsoft's Internet Explorer.
Certifications &
Norms
All material supplied by AEROSPACE
METRIC FASTENERS are accomplish with the Standard International
Norms and Certifications that herein we show.
Certifications
All material supplied comes with the CERTIFICATE OF CONFORMANCE, issued by the original manufacturer.
Also and upon request we can provide with official Certificates from the JAA Form One (Joint Aviation Authorities), European Union and from the FAA 8130-3 (Federal Aviation Administration) USA.


Norms
ISO
International Organization for Standardization
Institut
Belge de Normalisation (IBN)
The Belgian Institution for Standardization
DANSK
STANDARD (Denmark)
Danish Standards Association
AENOR
(Spain)
Asociación Española de Normalización y Certificación
AFNOR
(France)
Association Française de Normalisation
DIN
(Germany)
Deutsches Institut für Normung
UNI
(Italy)
Ente Nazionale Italiano di Unificacione
NEN (Netherlands)
Nederlands Normalisatie-Instituut
SABS
(South Africa)
South African Bureau of standards
SIS
(Sweden)
Swedish Standards Institute
SNV (Switzerland)
Schweizerische Normen-Vereinigung
Swiss Association for Standarization
BSI
(U.K.)
British Standards Institution
ANSI (USA)
American National Standards Institute
ASTM (USA)
American Society for Testing and Materials
ASME (USA)
The American Society of Mechanical Engineering
IFI
(USA)
Industrial Fasteners Institution
NCSCI (USA)
National Center for Standards and Certification
TÜV
Anlagentechnik GmbH
Unternemen gruppe TÜV Rheinland/Berlin-Bradenburg
Standard Specifications
We can supply any material with Standard Specifications which Part Number start with:
A
|
ABS
|
ABSO
|
AD
|
AFNOR
|
AGS
|
AIR
|
AN
|
ANSI
|
AS
|
ASME
|
ASN
|
ASNA
|
ASN.A
|
ASNE
|
ASP
|
ASTM
|
B
|
BAC
|
BACB
|
BACC
|
BAS
|
BB
|
BLT
|
BO
|
BN
|
BNAE
|
BRR
|
BS
|
CAN
|
CR
|
CSA
|
CSP
|
DAN
|
DHS
|
DIN
|
DON
|
DS
|
DHS
|
DTD
|
E
|
EA
|
EF
|
EN
|
ER
|
ESC
|
EWB
|
F
|
FM
|
FON
|
GB
|
GTS
|
H
|
HL
|
HLM
|
HLT
|
HPL
|
HS
|
HSL
|
HSR
|
HST
|
HSTB
|
HSTMJ
|
HT
|
HW
|
ISO
|
J
|
JIS
|
JN
|
K
|
KFN
|
KL
|
L
|
LMKAS
|
LN
|
M
|
MA
|
MBBN
|
MDS
|
MIL
|
MRCA
|
MS
|
NA
|
NAC
|
NAS
|
NASM
|
NF
|
NFL
|
NOR
|
NSA
|
NSE
|
NTA
|
OASP
|
OB
|
OBP
|
EU
OSB
|
OSBP
|
OSR
|
PAN
|
PLT
|
PRL
|
PR
EN
|
PSC
|
RAM
|
RS
|
S
|
SB
|
SBP
|
SD
|
SL
|
SP
|
ST
|
ST3M
|
STD
|
STL
|
TA
|
TAN
|
TiTJB
|
TL
|
TLV
|
TS
|
TYE
|
UA
|
UB
|
UBM
|
UN
|
UNI
|
UNJ
|
UNJF
|
VA
|
VDE
|
VFN
|
VGS
|
VLB
|
VSM
|
WVB
|
OTHERS
|
|||||||
In black the most relevant specifications.
Also we can provide with any other Standard references.
NSN o NIN: (National Stock
Number), NATO Number.
MIL: Standard Military
ORDNANCE: Standard Military Material
Specialized in HARD TO FIND ITEMS.
Herein we list the items with Standard Specifications that we can provide.
ADAPTERS |
BARS
|
BEARINGS
|
BELLOWS
|
BOLTS |
BUSHINGS
|
CAMS
|
CAPS
|
CLAMPS |
CLEVIS
|
CLIPS
|
COLLARS
|
CONNECTORS |
COVERS
|
CROSSINGS
|
ELBOWS
|
EYELTS |
FASTENERS
|
FITINGS
|
FLANGES
|
FORKS |
HINGES
|
INSERTS
|
JOINTS
|
LATCHES |
LEADS
|
LOCKS
|
NUTS
|
PACKINGS |
PINIONS
|
PINS
|
PLUGS
|
REDUCERS |
RINGS
|
RIVETS
|
RODS
|
SCREWS |
SEALS
|
SHAFTS
|
SLEEVES
|
SOCKETS |
SPACERS
|
STUDS
|
TUBES
|
UNIONS |
WASHERS |
WIRES |
OTHERS |
We are specialized in Hard to Find
Items.
About us Back to Home
AEROSPACE METRIC FASTENERS (AMF)
company specialized in the support of
METRIC STANDARD SPECIFICATIONS for the aviation
industry, spatial vehicles
and industrial equipments.

ADDRESS
29 Bravo
Murillo Street
28015 MADRID - SPAIN
PHONE NUMBER:
34 947 057 866
34 685 154 359
FAX: 34
91 448 05 15
E-MAIL: info@aerofastening.com


Web Map
PRODUCTS
Products
Specification
Certifications & Norms
APPLICATIONS
Applications
Aircraft Fleets
Helicopter Fleets
FIRM
ORDER
Warranties
Payment Terms
Terms & Conditions
Shipping
SERVICES
Inventory Control Sistems
Others
E-COMMERCE
Clients Protection*
Electronic Certification*
Data Protection*
Privacy*
*In
construction
Firm Orders
All the Quotations submitted by Aerospace Metric Fasteners to their clients, after the previous inquiries, already have the necessary and exactly terms, so they can place their Formal and Firm Purchase Order.
Those terms basically are as follows:
Warranties
The
warranties provided by AEROSPACE METRIC FASTENERS (AMF) in the material
supplied are as follow:
Material
supplied will be 100 % according with the conditions, specifications
and references (P/N) previously given in our formal Quotation and
accepted by the buyer in his formal Purchase Order.
Any Part Number (P/N) Interchangeable supplied, will be supported with
enough information regarding this interchangeability.
CERTIFICATE OF CONFORMANCE issued by the original manufacturer.
Upon request we can provide with official Certificates
from the JAA Form One (Joint Aviation Authorities), European Union
and from the FAA 8130-3 (Federal Aviation Administration) USA.
![]()
![]()
All material supplied by AEROSPACE METRIC FASTENERS, S.L. are accomplish with the Standard International Norms and Certifications.
FULL LOT TRACEABILITY (FLT) Complete warranty in the identification and follow-up of each Lot.
CHEMICAL
AND PHYSICAL CERTIFICATES
Full warranty for the physical and chemical composition of the products.
QUALITY
CONTROL
Accurate quality control for each product supplied.
Since
the EURO become legal currency in the EU countries, this will be the
normalized payment method to Aerospace Metric Fasteners, S.L. Also AMF will
accept others currencies such, USA Dollar, Swiss Franc and Sterling
Pound.
Aerospace Metric Fasteners, S.L. will accept as PAYMENT TERMS the most secure and accepted forms used in the E-commerce, together with our WARRANTIES conditions that we offer for the complete security of our clients. A complete definition of this payment method are under construction and soon will be included in this website.
Aerospace Metric Fasteners, S.L. will accept also as payment VISA AND MASTERCARD credit cards.
![]()
The Terms and Conditions that Aerospace Metric Fasteners, S.L. (AMF) offers subject the material of this program are:
1) Any material supplied by AMF will be in F.O.B. in Madrid, Spain.
2) This material will be always NEW AND ORIGINAL FROM FACTORY if the client do not specify any other condition, Surplus, Used, etc.
3) The AMF warranties, are the same extended warranties received from the original manufacturers, plus other additional (See WARRANTY page with full details).
4) The Payment Terms are according with the standard, common and secure practices used for E-commerce. (See PAYMENT TERMS).
5) The Shipping terms, see the SHIPPING page in this website.
A complete
and full detailed list of TERMS AND CONDICTIONS will be provided in
each Quotation that AMF submit to the client in all their inquiries.
AEROSPACE METRIC FASTENERS, S.L. (AMF) have arrangements with the most relevant international freight forwarders in order to ship the material to the final destination in the most effective cost, and according with the client instructions and timetable.
The client at any moment can check the situation of his shipment with the information that we facilitate:
* Copy of the shipping document with it´s tracking number
* Address on Internet where can follow-up at any moment the situation of the goods
* Estimated time of arrival
* Other data of interest
We offer export logistics services to our customers overseas, from our warehouse to your ocean port, airport or final customer location. We use an international network of freight forwarders to reduce your export transportation costs, saving time and monitoring the progress of your shipments.
Our export department offers an additional services to our overseas customers, such as:
1. All necessary shipping arrangements
2. Export Documentation
3. Certificate of origin, (When necessary)
4. Air Will Bills or Bills of Lading
5. Product Classification Cod