CGF Inspection AQL table for inspection sampling

The ‘AQL table’ is a fundamental tool for preparing a sampling plan for a random product inspection. They give you the number of samples to inspect, and the maximum numbers of defective samples that are allowed.
The 2 most common AQL tables
The first table gives you the code letter for sampling. In this example, if the batch to check contains 5,000 pcs, and if you choose level II (which is chosen by default for most inspections), the letter is L.

CGF INSPECTION AQL
The second table (for normal severity) gives you the useful information. The letter L means 200 samples must be checked. If you select the limits as 2.5% for major defects and 4.0% for minor defects, you reject the batch if you find more than 10 major and/or more than 14 minor defects.

These tables come from military standard 105E, which has been replaced by the ISO 2859-1 standard and the ANSI-ASQ z1.4 standard, among others.
More info about the AQL
And here are the original AQL charts, straight from the ISO 2859 standard: