Title: Design Process
1Design Process
- Design process is a collection of procedures and
habits that help teams design better products
2The Process of Design
- Designing is the process of making many decisions
that converts an abstract concept into a hardware
reality.
Concept
Product
37-Step Design Process
- Problem definition (PDS)
- External Search (Research)
- Internal Search (Brainstorming)
- Evaluation and Selection
- Detail Design (Engineering)
- Prototyping
- Documentation
4What Product?ToyTown Top Executives
Water Balloon
Rope Climber
Can Crusher
Better Mouse Trap
Coin Sorter
Nail Driver
Rope Climber
5Product Design SpecificationsCustomer Needs
- Climbs fast
- Affordable as a birthday present
- Fully assembled
- Uses batteries for power
- It is safe
- Looks good
- Plays music as it climbs
- Glows in the dark
- Last a long time
6Product Design SpecificationsEngineering Specs
- Climbs at 1 ft/s or faster
- Retail cost is to be less than 30
- Uses 2 AA batteries (not included)
- Has no removable small parts
- Music loudness between 20-30 db
- Luminosity is to be more than 5 W
- Works for more than 3 hours on 2 AA
7External Search
- Level-I
- Rope climbing toys / machines
- Rope climbers (sports or circus)
- Nature (spiders, bats, etc)
- Level-II (Team uses friction wheels)
- Hoists
- Trolleys
- Ski Lifts
8Internal Search Evaluation
- Brainstorming
- Generate many ideas
- Evaluate against PDS
- Select one to engineer
9Detail Design (Engineering)
More Abstract
Engineering
Less Abstract
10Design Process
- Top-level problem definition is called PDS
(Product Design Specifications) - Problem definitions at lower levels derive from
PDS - Sub-system design specifications.
- Component design specifications.
- Feature design specifications.
11Product Development Process
Product Planning
Design Brief (Mission Statement)
Market Research
Product Design Specifications QFD
12Product Development Process
PDS
Candidate Design
Concept Synthesis
Detail Design
Prototyping
Concept Evaluation
Release for Production
Candidate Design
13Detail Design
Candidate Design
Components No Numbers
System-Level Design
Parameter Design
Numbers
Prototype Testing
Release for Production
14Customers
- People who are affected by the product
Team
Globe (External)
Company (Internal)
15External Customers
Buyers
Retailer
End Users
Maintenance
EXTERNAL
Government Standards
Society
16Internal Customers
Manufacturing Procurement
Management
Marketing
Internal
Shipping
Legal
17What Do They Want?
- End Users
- Performance Functionality
- Affordability
- Ease of use including ergonomics
- Reliability and Long life
- Versatility
- Safety
- Low maintenance and easy assembly
- Esthetics
18External Customers
- Buying managers
- Low Cost/Performance
- Safety
- Ruggedness (abuse resistance)
- Ergonomics
- Long warrantees
- Reliable with Low downtime
- Low operating cost
19External Customers
- Retailers
- Small and attractive packaging
- Long shelf life
- Low cost/performance and Exciting features
- Maintenance
- Ease of maintenance
20External Customers
- Government / Standards / Society
- Conformance to laws and regulations
- Promotion of public health and safety
- Protection of environment
- Solution to chronic problems in society
- Traffic
- Energy
- Noise
- Drugs, abuse and other crimes
- Diversity / Social tolerance / Security
21Internal Customers
- Management
- Make a big profit
- On time delivery
- Low failure risk
- Documentation
- Process Conformance to company product
development process
22Internal Customers
- Marketing
- Attractive features to target buyers
- Low production cost
- Esthetics
- Attractive packaging
- On time delivery
- Long Warrantees
23Internal Customers
- Manufacturing
- Manufacturability using standard methods and
schedules. - Conformance to company documentation formats.
- Use of products from preferred vendors.
24Internal Customers
- Legal
- No patent infringements
- Safety
- All required safety warnings and labels
- Designed protection against reasonable abuse
- Codes and regulations
25Internal Customers
- Shipping and Packaging
- Ease of user assembly
- Small packaged size
- Ability of locking or fixing sensitive components
- Resistance against damage due to dropping,
vibrations, moisture, heat, and cold.
26(No Transcript)
27Product Design Specification
- Elements of PDS
- Performance (User)
- Speed,
- Capacity,
- Power,
- Accuracy,
- etc.
28Elements of PDS
- Environment (User)
- Temperature range, humidity, dust and dirt, etc.
- Life in service (User)
- 10 years, 5000 cycles, etc.
- Maintenance (User)
- What is the market policy, what customers accept
- Target production cost (User)
- Cost of comparable products and company policy.
29Elements of PDS
- Shipping
- Package sizes
- Damage resistance
30Elements of PDS
- Quantity (Manufacturing)
- Determined by market analysis.
- Manufacturing facility (Manufacturing)
- Is the design constrained by existing facility?
- Are parts to be contracted and assembled
in-house? - Does the company policy dictate certain
facilities?
31Element of PDS
- Size and shape (Marketing)
- Weight (Marketing)
- What is the desired weight?
- Should handles or lifting points be provided?
- Should it be modular for better handling?
- Aesthetics (Marketing,User)
- Color, shape, form, texture, finish.
- Market research.
32Elements of PDS
- Materials (Marketing, Codes, Regulations)
- Left to designers unless company guidelines or
regulations restrict certain materials (asbestos,
lead). - Product life span (Marketing, Manufacturing)
- Life of a product as a marketable entity.
Several months or several years?
33Elements of PDS
- Laws, Codes, and standards (Government)
- Ergonomics (User)
34Elements of PDS
- Quality and reliability (Marketing)
- Company policy regarding warranties
- Competitors warranty policies
- Testing (Marketing, QA)
- What tests would be performed to verify
performance - Standard tests
35Elements of PDS
- Shelf life (storage) - Retail
- Possibility of rust, decay, deterioration
- Processes (company guidelines)
- Use of certain standards (GDT for example)
- Use of certain procedures
- Time-scales (deadlines) - Management
- Whole design project, milestones
36Elements of PDS
- Safety (User, Government, Legal)
- What safety requirements are mandated by
government - Professional society's codes and standards
- Need for warning labels
- Likely degrees of abuse or misinterpretation of
operating procedures.
37Elements of PDS
- Company constraints (Management)
- Compatibility with other products
- Documentation (Management Legal)
- A product design must include a full formal
documentation per company guidelines. - Safety, Operation, and Service documents.
- Etc.
38Elements of PDS
- Legal (Lawyers)
- What product liability law suits are associated
with similar products and why. - Note the legal terms
- defect of specification
- defect of design
- defect of manufacture
- Relevant patents
39Element of PDS
- Installation (Installers)
- Many products must interface with other products
or be assembled with other products. - Disposal (Society)
- Should any parts by recyclable?
- bio-degradable?
40Wording of the PDS Document
- Format of most statements in PDS
- The device must ..
- The device is to
- The device is desired to .
- Avoid mixing requirements.
- One sentence per requirement.
- Cast PDS statements in a positive format
41PDS is a Dynamic Document
- A design statement usually begins as a vague
statement - The device is to be easy to use
- The device is to be safe
- The device is to be inexpensive
- The device is to be rugged and reliable
- The device is to be portable
42Wording of the PDS Document
- Example ESCOs Pin Remover
- The pin-remover is to be light.
- The pin-remover must work in a wet, cold, and
dusty environment. - The Pin-remover must be safe
- The Pin-remover must have a 3-year warranty.
43PDS Example
- The PR is to be rugged.
- must work with air pressure.
- is be easy to use.
- is to pass HTS tests.
- is to last 5 years in normal usage.
- is to be easy to carry.
44PDS Example
- is to sell for less than 150.
- is to costless than 50 to make.
- is to have low maintenance needs.
- is to be difficult to use as a hammer.
- must not infringe on patented devices.
- Production volume is to be 300 per year
45PDS Example
- is to be tested by June 2006.
- is to be released by Sep. 2006.
- is to be used with Dredge Point models.
- is to work faster than the hammer
46Engineering Specifications
- What is
- Fast, accurate, high-performing?
- Light, Small, portable?
- Easy to use?
- Safe?
- Stylish?
47Engineering Specifications
- Verifiable PDS statements
- Developed for important PDS statements
- Have associated target numbers (Yes/No OK)
48Engineering SpecificationsTips
- Set up metrics and targets so the designer has
maximum options in accomplishing the PDS
49Engineering SpecificationsTips
- PDS The Dog Feeder must not tip over when bumped
or pushed by a dog. - Bad The DF must weigh 50 lbs
- Good The dog feeder must withstand 30 lbs
applied to its top from side
50A Typical PDS Page
- Requirement PR is to be easy to maintain
- Primary customer End users
- Priority High
- Metrics and Targets
- Daily maintenance None
- Weekly maintenance lt 10 minutes field
- Yearly maintenance lt 1 hour Shop
- Cost of weekly maintenance lt 10c
- Cost of yearly maintenance lt 10
51 Engineering Requirements
Competition
IMPORTANCE
Customer Needs PDS Statements
Relation Between Engineering and Customer
Requirements
Competition
Target