1 / 37

Bruce Mayer, PE Licensed Electrical & Mechanical Engineer BMayer@ChabotCollege.edu

Engineering 11. Engineering Design. Bruce Mayer, PE Licensed Electrical & Mechanical Engineer BMayer@ChabotCollege.edu. OutLine  Engineering Design. What is engineering design, really? Function to form Design process Phases of design Product Realization/Development Process

nicola
Télécharger la présentation

Bruce Mayer, PE Licensed Electrical & Mechanical Engineer BMayer@ChabotCollege.edu

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Engineering 11 EngineeringDesign Bruce Mayer, PE Licensed Electrical & Mechanical EngineerBMayer@ChabotCollege.edu

  2. OutLine Engineering Design • What is engineering design, really? • Function to form • Design process • Phases of design • Product Realization/Development Process • Concurrent engineering • Teamwork • Summary

  3. Design vs. Ambiguity • Design ≡ a “valid” or “acceptable” Solution to an OPEN-ENDED Problem • e.g.; Design a Cell-Phone that OUTSELLS All Others • All design challenges are ambiguous. • Unlike answers to mathematical expressions there are always several “right” answers to ANY design challenge. • The answer is always uncertain or ambiguous. • Not all design solutions are equally good however, and some are definitely wrong.

  4. Well-Defined vs. Open-Ended • Design Problems Have NO “Correct” Solution; • Have only: Successful and UNsucessful Solutions • Compare to Skills-Development (practice) problems • Skills Development (Textbook Type) • Well-defined, • Complete (correctly stated, unique) • Correct answer exists • Money not involved • You know When You Arrive at the Answer • Requires Application of Very Specific Knowledge • Design Problems (Open Ended) • Poorly-defined • No Unique Solution; Depends on Approach • Cost & Schedule are Critical Factors • “Done Point” Very Hard to Identify • Need MultiDisciplinary Knowledge

  5. Analysis vs. Synthesis • Analysis → Know What IS/OCCURS and Then Try to EXPLAIN it • A separating or breaking up of a whole into its parts, with an examination of these parts to reveal their nature, proportion, function, interrelationships, etc. • Synthesis → Know What IS NEEDED and Then Try to CREATE (Design) it • The putting together of parts or elements so as to form a whole

  6. Analysis Forces Moments Flow Pressure Machines Mechanisms Motion Energy Conversion Synthesis & Testing Sketch/Draw Predict Behavior Model or Test SubScale Tests or Experiments Materials Manufacturing Example  MechEngr Design • Realization • Customer needs • Company Requirements • Manufacturing Costs • Performance • Analysis • Testing

  7. Design vs. Analysis • Which of the following is design and which is analysis? • Given that the customer wishes to fasten together two steel plates, select appropriate sizes & materials for the bolt, nut & washer • Given the cross-section geometry of a new airplane wing then determine the lift it produces using Fluid Mechanics principles DESIGN ANALYSIS • Form is the solution to a design problem • In this Case the Bolt SIZE & Material

  8. Form FOLLOWS Function • Function “Directs” Form • Form ≡ Shape, Size, Configuration, Weight, Human InterFace Appearance, Materials of Construction, etc. • DESIGN connects Form (the OutPut) to the desired Function (the InPut) Thru a DECISION-MAKING PROCESS

  9. FunctionForm Graphically Function • Control, hold, move, protect, heat/cool, store, amplify, etc. DESIGN • Decision-Making Process • Shape, configuration, size, materials, manufacturing processes, etc. Form

  10. Engr-Design as Decision-Making • Design Definition  Short Version • Set of decision making processes and activities to determine the FORM of an object, given the customer’s desired FUNCTION • Design Definition  Long Version • The process of devising a system, component, or process to meet desired needs. It is a decision-making process (often iterative), in which basic-science, mathematics and the engineering-sciences are applied to optimally convert resources to meet a stated objective

  11. Decision-Making  Design Process • Establish Functional Requirements • Determine Constraints • Set Performance Goals FormulatingProblem DESIGN Specs • CREATE Alternative Forms (Shape, Configuration, Size, Materials, Power-Sources, etc.) GeneratingAlternatives ReDesignIteration ALLAlternatives AnalyzingAlternatives FEASIBLE Alternatives EvaluatingAlternatives BEST AlternativeMANUFACTURING Specs

  12. “Phases” of Engineering Design • How do design decisions change over time? • Is there a logical grouping of decisions? • Illustrate with an Example: Design a Brake for stopping a Spinning Shaft. • Requirements for Brake • 8” Diameter, Horizontal shaft • 4330 Ni/Cr/Mo Alloy-Steel shaft material • 1000 Pound shaft weight • 3600 rpm maximum rotational speed

  13. FORMULATION Phase - Brake • Early in the design process, we decide upon the nature of the Functional Requirements, and Inputs for the Design • Decide upon a satisfactory rate of deceleration • Determine the length of the shaft • Determine where it is supported • Determine what actuating energy is available • Decide to Learn From existing similar products • Choose to research brakes in the library

  14. CONCEPT Design Phase - Brake • Decide PHYSICAL PRINCIPLES that will perform the braking function • surface friction (e.g. drum brake, disk/caliper) • opposing magnetic fields (e.g., inverse motor) • air friction (e.g. fan blades) • Assume we DECIDE on surface friction

  15. CONFIGURATION Dsgn Phase • Decide upon PRODUCT components & how they are arranged/configured • Product configuration: • disk/caliper, or drum, or band brake • location on shaft (right, left, middle) • Assume we decide on a disk/caliper brake

  16. CONFIGURATION Dsgn Phase • Decide upon PART features & how they are arranged/configured • Part configuration: • relative size of hubto disk • relative size of rotor thickness to diameter

  17. PARAMETRIC Design Phase • Decide upon SPECIFIC VALUES for design variables/parameters • rotor diameter (outer) • rotor thickness • brake pad area • pad material • hydraulic pressure on piston

  18. DETAIL Design Phase • Decide upon the remaining MANUFACTURING specifications • Machined rotor tolerances • Pad bonding resin cure time & temperature • Assembly procedure • Testing procedure

  19. Final FORM is the Design Solution • FUNCTION stop a spinning shaft • FORM • rotor: 10 inch diameter, Cast Iron, 3/8-inch thick, cooling passages • Forged 4140 steel caliper/housing • brake pads, 2 opposing, 4 sq. in., metal particles in epoxy matrix • Stainless steel 304 piston,1.25-inch diameter, with elastomeric seals • 105 psi hydraulic piston pressure

  20. Problem Formulation DesignPhaseSummary Concept Design PreliminaryDesign Configuration Design EmbodimentDesign ParaMetric Design Detail Design

  21. Alternative Design-Phases • Another, more Detailed, Description of the Stages/Phases of Design • ID Problem or Needed-Fcn • Define the Goals/Performance • Research & Gather-Data • BrainStorm/Creative-Solutions • Analyze Potential Solutions • Develop & Test Models • Make the Decision • Communicate & Specify • Implement & Commercialize ConceptualDesign PreliminaryDesign Critical Design Review FinalDesign

  22. Product Realization Process • Also Known as the Product LIFE CYCLE • Design Occurs during PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT Process FullyRealized Product Product Development Process Disposal Production Design Service Engineering Design Distribution Industrial Design Manufacturing (Production) Sales & Marketing Customer Need

  23. The Product Life Cycle Design • establish function, determine form Manufacture • fabricate, purchase, assemble, test, ship/distribute Use • set up, operate & maintain, repair Retire • TearDown/disassemble, recycle/dispose

  24. Product Life Cycle - Graphically Innovation Cycle time Cash Flow Definition Freeze Profit Zone Release Investigation Obsolescence Break Even time Opportunity Time Product Development • Product Development “Kicks Off” the Product Life Cycle

  25. ConCurrent Engineering • Also Known as Simultaneous Engineering, this Method Reduces the time spent in Product Development

  26. ConCurrent ENGR Elements • non-linear product design approach • all phases of product development operate at the same time – simultaneously • Both product & process design run in parallel and occur in the same time frame • Product and Process are closely coordinated to achieve Optimum Results in a short amount of time • Decision making involves full team participation and involvement

  27. WJ-2000 Concurrent Engineering B. Mayer SysEngr ME B. Mayer SWE ME FSMenagh ME RSMurphy MSWalton CEErickson R. Reghitto HSPaek IE ME ME ME L. Harlamoff EE MSWalton AKMcGrogan ME • By Assignment • Sales Engineer • Safety Engineer • Manufacturing Engineer • Reliability Engineer • Service Engineer Z. Yuan DMDobkin ME EngrPhysics ProcessEngr AKPlumley

  28. The Need for Engineering Teams • Increasing Technology Content • Complex Engineered Systems Have Too Much Information Content for Any One Person to Address • Speed • Time-To-Market Often Means the Difference Between Profits & Losses • Teams Allow work to Be Done in PARALLEL (at the SAME TIME)

  29. A Team  What is it? • A Team Is A Small Group Of People With Complementary Skills Who Are Committed To A Common Purpose, Performance Goals, and Approach For Which They Hold Themselves MUTUALLY ACCOUNTABLE

  30. Team Attributes • Common Goal • This Must Be Clearly Communicated to Generate a Feeling of Common Purpose • Leadership • A Critical Function To Keep The Team Focused • Complementary Skills • Resources are Limited; Each Team Member Should have a CLEARLY DEFINED and UNIQUE Role

  31. Team Attributes cont. • Effective Communication • A CRITICAL Leadership Function • Honest & Productive Communication is Needed for Design/Solution Integration • Greatest advantage Humans have over the rest of the Animal Kingdom is communication • Creativity • A “Close Knit” & Motivated Team Generates Creative Energy Thru Goal-Oriented Interaction

  32. All Done for Today DilbertDesign

  33. Engineering 11 AppendixEngineering Rolls Bruce Mayer, PE Registered Electrical & Mechanical EngineerBMayer@ChabotCollege.edu

  34. LifeCyc Engineering Activities

  35. LifeCyc Engineering Activities

  36. The HYPE Cycle

  37. Potato Sorting Machine • Optyx® WPS for whole potatoes achieves a three-way sort using a combination of air ejectors to remove foreign material (FM) and a unique deflector system to separate potatoes for rework from good potatoes. Maximizing the removal of foreign material and providing extremely gentle handling to avoid potato bruising, Optyx WPS improves product quality and protects downstream equipment while reducing labor costs and increasing yields. http://www.key.net/products/optyx/optyx-wps-sorter/default.html

More Related