Title: Engineering Design Curriculum
1Engineering Design Curriculum
- Courtesy of
- www.engineering-ed.org/documents/week_1_design_pro
cess.ppt
2Course Objectives
- Apply the engineering design process
- Define a problem (need) and develop alternatives
for solving - Build, test, evaluate prototypes
- Create and use engineering drawings
- Demonstrate drafting techniques
3Engineering design is
- the process of devising a system, component or
process to meet needs - a decision-making process in which science and
mathematics are applied to convert resources to
meet objectives - establishing objectives criteria, synthesis,
analysis, construction, testing, and evaluation
4Problem Characteristics
- Engineering Problem
- Problem statement incomplete, ambiguous
- No readily identifiable closure
- Solutions neither unique nor compact
- Solution needs integration of many specialties
- Science Problem
- Succinct problem statement
- Identifiable closure
- Unique solution
- Problem defined and solved with specialized
knowledge
5Typical Design Problems
Design a system for lifting and moving loads of
up to 5000 lb in a manufacturing facility. The
facility has an unobstructed span of 50 ft. The
lifting system should be inexpensive and satisfy
all relevant safety standards.
6Studying Engineering Design
- Develop student creativity
- Use open-ended problems
- Use design theory and methods
- Formulate design problem statements and
specifications - Consider alternative solutions
- Consider feasibility
7Studying Engineering Design
- Know and apply production processes
- Understand concurrent engineering design
- Create detailed system descriptions
- Include realistic constraints such as
- Economic factors, safety, reliability
- aesthetics, ethics, social impacts
8Awesome Engineers
- Place ethics and morals above all else
- Are team players
- Follow a deterministic design process
- Follow a schedule
- Document their work
- Never stop learning
9Module Organization The Design Process
- Identify a need, who is the customer
- Establish design criteria and constraints
- Evaluate alternatives (systems or components)
- Build a prototype
- Test/evaluate prototype against criteria
- Analyze, tweak (?), redesign (?), retest
- Document specifications, drawings to build
10Engineering Design ProcessBackup Chart
- Identify a need
- Establish design criteria and constraints
- Evaluate alternatives
- Build prototype
- Test/evaluate against design criteria
- Analyze, redesign, retest
- Communicate the design
11The Engineering Design Process
12Design is an Iterative Process
- Models or prototypes are made and problems that
arise may require new ideas to solve and a return
to an earlier stage in the process - Finally drawings are released to manufacturing
for production
- Begins with a recognition of need for a product,
service, or system - During the idea phase encourage a wide variety of
solutions through brainstorming, literature
search, and talking to users - Best solutions are selected for further refinement
13Engineering Design Defined
- The crux of the design process is creating a
satisfactory solution to a need
Harrisberger
14Engineering Design Process
Customer Need or Opportunity
Source Accrediting Board For Engineering and
Technology
15Primary Design Features
- Meets a need, has a customer
- Design criteria and constraints
- Evaluate alternatives (systems or components)
- Build prototype (figuratively)
- Test/evaluate against test plans (criteria)
- Analyze, tweak (?), redesign (?), retest
- Project book record, analyses, decisions, specs
16Step 1 Need
- Have a need, have a customer
- External vs internal Implied vs explicit
- Often stated as functional requirement
- Often stated as bigger, cheaper, faster, lighter
- Boilerplate purpose The design and construction
of a (better____something)_____ for (kids,
manufacturing, medicine) to do __________.
17Step 2 Criteria Constraints
Design criteria are requirements you specify for
your design that will be used to make decisions
about how to build the product
Aesthetics Geometry Physical Features Performance
Inputs-Outputs Use Environment Usability Reliabili
ty
18Some Design Constraints
- Cost
- Time
- Knowledge
- Legal, ethical
- Physical size, weight, power, durability
- Natural, topography, climate, resources
- Company practices
19Activity/Demonstration
- Product index cards
- Pair up as customer-designer
- Variation on 20 questions
- Identify some design criteria and constraints for
sample products - Discuss
20Step 3 Evaluate Alternatives
- Needs best stated as function, not form
- Likely to find good alternatives for cheapest,
fastest, lightest, and encourage discovery - Research should reveal what has been done
- Improve on what has been done
- Play alternatives off criteria and constraints
- Brainstorming helps
21Simulation
22Best Design
- Choose best design that meets criteria
- Demonstrate tradeoff analyses (among criteria and
constraints) are high quality - Cost (lifecycle) is always consideration
- Resist overbuilding drives complexity, cost,
time, resources
A quality design meets customers expectations!
23Step 4 Prototype
- Prototype is implementation of chosen design
alternative - It is a proof of design, production and
suitability - Prototypes are often cost prohibitive Models and
simulations may suffice - Quality design does not include redesigning a lot
of prototypes
24Prototype
Prototype picture of 747
25Step 5 Test it Well
- Test and optimize design against constraints and
customer expectations. - Create a test plan showing how to test
- Test in the conditions of use
- Good test plan shows what test, expected results
how to test, and what analyses will be. It
relates to specification requirements - e.g. test plan for light bulb (activity)
26Activity Light Bulb Test
Production assembly-time-demonstration
Robustness-vibration, temperature-test article
Life-hours-statistical sample
Duty cycle-count on/off-prototype
Brightness-lumens-measure
Packaging-drop test-do last
Base fit-yes/no-first article demo
27Step 6 Test and Redesign
28Test Results
Successful Test Satisfying
Test Failure Priceless
29Step 7 Documentation
A complete record All key decisions Good
drawings Test plans Results Conclusions Things
learned
30Draw a Good Picture
- Drawings for project notebook, application,
display - Photos, sketches, CAD 2-D or 3-D
- Show assembly, components, materials
31Product Sketches
32Other Drawings