1 this week lab form design teams and decide what you’ll design this week homework qfd; design...

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1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture CDEN2006 Install SolidWorks2011

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Page 1: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

1

THIS WEEK LAB

Form design teams and decide what you’ll

design

THIS WEEK HOMEWORK

QFD; Design Specifications

Read:

PDS and QFD

PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

CDEN2006

Install SolidWorks2011

Page 2: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

2

Page 3: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

3

1. Specification Development / Planning PhaseDetermine need, customer and engineering requirementsDevelop a project plan

2. Conceptual Design PhaseGenerate and evaluate conceptsSelect best solution

3. Detail Design PhaseCAD modelsEngineering drawingsDesign documentationPart specification

Prototype and testing

4. Production PhaseComponent manufacture and assemblyPlant facilities / capabilities

5. Service PhaseInstallation, use , maintenance and safety

6. Product Retirement PhaseLength of use, disposal, and recycle

This is the extend of MME2259a design project

Production, service and retirement phases consideration will have an impact on the MME2259a design project, especially in the detailed design phase.

ENGINEERING DESIGN PROCESS

Page 4: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

4

DESIGN INFLUENCES THE FOLLOWING:

Product Quality

Product Manufacturing Cost

Product Cost

Page 5: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

5

DESIGN INFLUENCE ON PRODUCT QUALITY

Quality is a composite of factors that are responsibility of the design engineer.

Decisions made during the design process determine the product’s quality as perceived by the customers.

Quality cannot be built into a product unless it is designed into it

Page 6: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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DESIGN INFLUENCE ON MANUFACTURING AND PRODUCT COST

Specification

Development

Conceptual

DesignDetailed Design

Time

100

60

0

20

40

80

Note that ¾ of the product cost associated with design is committed by the end of the

conceptual design phase

Early design decisions have the greatest effect on the final product cost.

% of product manufacturing cost

committed

% of product cost committed

Page 7: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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DESIGN PROCESS PARADOX

Time into Design Process

Freedom

Knowledge of Design

Design Freedom

100%

0%

Page 8: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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SEQUENTIAL VS. CONCURRENT PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT

Sequential Product Development should be avoided

Marketing Research and Development

Engineering Manufacturing

Page 9: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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SEQUENTIAL VS. CONCURRENT PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT

Concurrent Product Development is preferred

Marketing

Research and Development Engineering

ManufacturingService

Voice of customer

Satisfaction of customer needs

Page 10: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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WE ARE NOW READY TO DESIGN A PRODUCT

BUT HOW DO WE KNOW THAT CUSTOMERS WILL BUY IT?

Page 11: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

11

Time was when a man could order a pair of shoes directly from the cobbler. By

measuring the foot himself and personally handling all aspects of manufacturing,

the cobbler could assure the customer would be satisfied

http://www.qfdi.org

Page 12: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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As marketing requested it

As sales ordered it As engineering designed it

As production manufactured it

As plant installed it What the customer really wanted !!

TODAY MANUFACTURING HAPPENS VERY FAR FROM CUSTOMERS,

IT’S EASY TO LOST TOUCH ...

Page 13: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

13

IMPORTANCE OF CUSTOMER RESEARCH

Customer research is essential to developing any new

product or service. Without a complete understanding of

your customers’ wants and needs, you may be developing a

product that is out-of-sync with your market and ultimately

doomed to failure.

http://www.ams-inc.com/

Page 14: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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DIFFERENT WAYS TO FIND WHAT CUSTOMERS NEED AND WANT

Use existing feedback

Surveys

Customer interviews

Competitive analysis

Just ask them

• Actual ways companies use to find customers’

needs and wants are tightly guarded trade secrets!

Page 15: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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• Must be discriminatory• Must be measurable• Must be orthogonal: no overlapping of requirements,

each requirement should identify a unique feature• Must be universal: applicable to all alternatives under

consideration• Must be external to problem: must not impose design

choices

CUSTOMER REQUIREMENTS

WHAT?

Page 16: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

16

Must be discriminatory

CUSTOMER REQUIREMENTS

Page 17: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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Must be measurable

CUSTOMER REQUIREMENTS

Page 18: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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CUSTOMER REQUIREMENTS

Must be orthogonal: no overlapping of requirements, each requirement should identify a unique feature

Page 19: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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CUSTOMER REQUIREMENTS

Must be universal: applicable to all alternatives under consideration

Page 20: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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CUSTOMER REQUIREMENTS

Must be external to problem;must not impose design choices

Page 21: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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WE SATISFY CUSTOMER REQUIREMENTS BY DESIGNING

A PRODUCT THAT IS CHARACTERIZED BY CERTAIN

SPECIFICATIONS

PRODUCT

DESIGN SPECIFICATION

HOW?

CUSTOMER

REQUIREMENTS

WHAT?

Page 22: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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PRODUCT DESIGN SPECIFICATIONS

HOW

Other names for engineering design specifications include:• Engineering design specifications• Engineering requirements• Design requirements• Functional requirements• Objectives and constraints• Technical requirements• Technical specifications

Page 23: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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PRODUCT DESIGN SPECIFICATION (PDS) LIST

Is a detailed summary of the design requirements to be met in order to produce a successful product or process.

BASIC APPROACH TO CREATE PDS

Write a separate specification for each element of the PDS list.

If possible, the specification should be expressed in quantitative terms, and when appropriate it should give limits within which acceptable performance lies.

Performance attributes may be divided into:

(i) attributes that must be satisfied(ii) attributes that you want to satisfy

Page 24: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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PRODUCT DESIGN SPECIFICATIONS (PDS) LIST

1. Performance - List the functions to be performed by the product, and the desired level of performance (eg. engineering requirements, targets, specifications).

2. Operating Environment - Specify the operating environment for the product (eg. range of temperature, pressure range, abuse by operator, etc).

3. Standards - List relevant standards that must be adhered to (eg. ANSI, ASTM, CSA, ISO)

4. Materials - Poorly chosen materials can lead to product failure or unnecessary costs (eg. material performance characteristics, key material properties)

5. Customer - List any information on customer likes, dislikes, preferences, and prejudices (customer driven design)

6. Ergonomics - Identify any man-machine interfaces (eg. need for handles, buttons, displays…).

7. Aesthetics, Appearance and Finish - Consider color, shape, texture, and form at the onset of the design (this is what the customer sees first).

8. Competition Benchmarking - Perform a thorough analysis of existing and future competitors (determine how the customer perceives the competition’s ability to meet each design requirement).

Page 25: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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9. Quality and Reliability - High risk areas of the product should be identified, and the risks minimized using formal trade-off techniques in the design process (product must meet or exceed customer’s expectations).

10. Testing and Inspection - Specify the tests required to demonstrate that the product meets the desired specifications, and any quality requirements.

11. Maintenance and Logistics - Specify ease of access to the components likely to require maintenance (speed and ease of repair can influence customer’s acceptance of the product).

12. Service Life - Establish the expected service life and operation duty cycle for the product (How long is it expected to last while in operation).

13. Market Constraints - List any feedback from the marketplace.

14. Target Product Cost - Establish selling cost at the onset of the design process (Retail price is often 3X manufacturing cost for mass produced items).

15. Quantity - Estimate the number of products to be produced (cost/unit to fabricate is influenced by production method).

16. Product Life Span - Predict how long the product is to remain on the market (influences investment decisions, potential sales).

PRODUCT DESIGN SPECIFICATIONS (PDS) LIST

Page 26: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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17. Shelf Life in Storage - Consideration must be made for protecting parts from the natural elements while not in use (some products must be stored on hazardous sites for prolonged periods of time).

18. Size - This is an important constraint for shipping, storage and marketing.

19. Weight - An important factor in handling a product on the manufacturing floor, transportation and installation (weight is related to size and cost).

20. Shipping - Determine how the product will be delivered to the customer (size of box cars, weight on transport trucks).

21. Packaging - Specify the type of packaging required for shipping and storage (protection during transportation, display).

22. In-House Processes - Identify any specified treatment of parts (eg. heat treatment, water resistant coating).

23. Manufacturing Facilities - Determine whether the product is to be produced in an existing facility or a new plant must be built (effects design choices such as materials and shape, directly effects cost).

24. Patents - Consult all areas of useful information prior to launching the design (prevent costly lawsuits).

PRODUCT DESIGN SPECIFICATIONS (PDS) LIST

Page 27: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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25. Design Schedule - List definite milestones that the design team is required to meet (schedule adequate time to due design activity, testing).

26. Company Constraints - Any constraints imposed by company must be spelled out (limits on new plant investments, preferred vendors/suppliers).

27. Social and Political Factors - List any constraints arising from government regulation (eg. pollution laws, seatbelt legislation, …).

28. Safety - Critical parts whose failure will cause injury must be identified and documented (Warning labels should be devised and operating manuals should clearly spell out what is abusive use of the product).

[Ullman 1992]

PRODUCT DESIGN SPECIFICATIONS (PDS) LIST

Page 28: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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YOU WILL HAVE TO DEVELOP DESIGN SPECIFICATIONS

CONSIDERING THESE 28 FACTORS

1. Performance

2. Operating Environment

3. Standards

4. Materials

5. Customer

6. Ergonomics

7. Aesthetics, Appearance and Finish

8. Competition Benchmarking

9. Quality and Reliability

10. Testing and Inspection

11. Maintenance and Logistics

12. Service Life

13. Market Constraints

14. Target Product Cost

15. Quantity

16. Product Life Span

17. Shelf Life in Storage

18. Size

19. Weight

20. Shipping

21. Packaging

22. In-House Processes

23. Manufacturing Facilities

24. Patents

25. Design Schedule

26. Company Constraints

27. Social and Political Factors

28. Safety

Page 29: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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PRODUCT DESIGN SPECIFICATION: A WATER MIXER TAP

Selected specifications:

Maximum pressure 15 bar

Maximum temperature 60OC (standard) 100OC (short time)

Flow 20L/min

Service life 8 years

These specifications are input for a designer’s analysis of the required functionality and constraints.

Page 30: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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Functions: Meter

Stop

Adjust

Mix

Inputs: Pressure

Flow rate

Temperature of hot and cold water

Outputs: Pressure

Flow rate

Temperature of mixed water

The specification is an input for a designer’s analysis of the required functionality and constraints.

For example:

The flow of water is either stopped or metered such that the mixed temperature can be adjusted to any desired value regardless of the water flow rate. Furthermore, the water flow rate must remain unchanged as temperature changes.

PRODUCT DESIGN SPECIFICATION: A WATER MIXER TAP

Page 31: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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PRODUCT DESIGN SPECIFICATION: AN ELECTRIC TOOTHBRUSH

Page 32: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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PRODUCT DESIGN SPECIFICATION: A SEAT SUSPENSION

Page 33: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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WE NOW KNOW WHAT ARE CUSTOMERS NEEDS AND WE KNOW

HOW TO DEVELOP PRODUCT SPECIFICATIONS TO MEET THOSE

NEEDS.

HOWEVER, DESIGN PROCESS IS FULL OF TRADE-OFFS AND NOT

ALL SPECIFICATIONS CAN BE FULLY SATISFIED. WE NEED A WAY

TO PRIORITIZE THOSE SPECIFICATIONS.

WE ALSO NEED A QUANTITATIVE WAY TO COMPARE OUR (YET

TO BE DESIGNED) PRODUCT TO EXISTING COMPETITIVE

PRODUCTS.

HOW DO WE CONNECT CUSTOMERS’ NEEDS TO PRIORITIZED

DESIGN SPECIFICATIONS?

Page 34: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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WE SATISFY CUSTOMER REQUIREMENTS BY DESIGNING

A PRODUCT IS CHARACTERIZED BY CERTAIN SPECIFICATIONS

PRODUCT

DESIGN SPECIFICATION

HOW?

CUSTOMER

REQUIREMENTS

WHAT?

QFD LINKS CUSTOMER REQUIREMENTS WITH

PRODUCT DESIGN SPECIFICATIONS

Page 35: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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Deployment:

The distribution of forces in preparation for battle or work

QUALITY FUNCTION DEPLOYMENT (QFD)

Page 36: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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QFD was developed to bring this personal interface to modern manufacturing

and business. In today's industrial society, where the growing distance between

producers and users is a concern, QFD links the needs of the customer (end

user) with design, development, engineering, manufacturing, and service

functions.

Quality Function Deployment is a technique developed in Japan during the mid-

1970's for better understanding the design problem, in particular of customer

needs and to relate them to product design specifications.

QUALITY FUNCTION DEPLOYMENT (QFD)

Page 37: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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AN INFLATABLE KAYAK

In class exercise

Page 38: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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STEPS IN QFD EXERCISE

1. Identify the customers 

2. Determine the customers' requirements: What do the customers want?  

3. Determine relative importance of the requirements 

4. Generate engineering specifications: How will the customers' requirements be met? 

5. Relate customers requirements to engineering specifications

6. Identify relationships between engineering requirements

7. Identify and evaluate the competition: How satisfied is the customer now? 

8. Set engineering targets: How much is good enough?

AN INFLATABLE KAYAK

Page 39: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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ENGINEERING

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CORRELATION

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WHO?

1. Identify customers:

Who are they?

QFD Chart also called HOUSE OF QUALITY

Page 40: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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2. Determine customers’ requirements:

What do customers need and want?

ENGINEERING

REQUIREMENTS

Page 41: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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3. Determine the relative importance of

customers’ requirements.

ENGINEERING

REQUIREMENTS

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4. Generate engineering requirements (PDS):

How will the customers’ requirements be met?

ENGINEERING

REQUIREMENTS

Page 43: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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5. Relate customers’ requirements to

engineering requirements

ENGINEERING

REQUIREMENTS

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6. Identify relationships between

engineering requirements

ENGINEERING

REQUIREMENTS

Page 45: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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WHO?

7. Identify and evaluate competition.

How satisfied is the customer now?

ENGINEERING

REQUIREMENTS

Page 46: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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8. Set engineering targets

How much is good enough?

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REQUIREMENTS

Page 47: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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HAVE WE MET OUR TARGETS AT THE

END OF THE DESIGN PROCESS?

Beginning of design

process: PDS

End of design

Process: Prototype

?

We’ll do this at the end of the design project

Page 48: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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Competitor A Competitor B

AN INFLATABLE KAYAK

Page 49: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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AN INFLATABLE KAYAK

76 73

Mass

Page 50: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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DESIGN INFLUENCE ON PRODUCT COST

Specification Development

% of product cost committed

Conceptual Design

Detailed Product Design

Time

100

60

0

20

40

80

Having completed the design specification phase we

have already committed 40% of product cost!

Page 51: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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1. Product Planning- Translating what the customer wants (in their language, e.g., portable, convenient phone service) into a list of prioritized product/service design requirements (in your language, e.g., cell phones) that describes how the product works. It also compares your performance with your competition's, and sets targets for improvement to differentiate your product/service from your competitor's.

2. Part Planning - Translating product specifications (design criteria from step 1) into part characteristics (e.g., light weight, belt-clip, battery-driven, not-hardwired but radio-frequency based).

3. Process Planning - Translating part characteristics (from step 2) into optimal process characteristics that maximize your ability to deliver Six Sigma quality

4. Production Planning - Translating process characteristics (from step 3) into manufacturing or service delivery methods that will optimize your ability to deliver Six Sigma quality in the most efficient manner (e.g., cellular antennas installed with overlapping coverage to eliminate dropped calls).

FOUR PHASE QFD APPROACH

Page 52: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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Product Planning

Component Design

Process Planning

Production Planning

FOUR PHASE QFD APPROACH

Page 53: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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TWO PHASE QFD APPROACH

Page 54: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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LOG SPLITTER

Partial PDS

Size of log

Width

Diameter

Time to split

Type of wood (pine, oak, …)

Weight

Portability

Terrain?

Max towing speed?

Customer requirements

Any log size

Works fast

Tow-able

Lightweight

Inexpensive

Last forever

Page 55: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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Page 56: 1 THIS WEEK LAB Form design teams and decide what you’ll design THIS WEEK HOMEWORK QFD; Design Specifications Read: PDS and QFD PDS and QFD ES1050 lecture

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