Design For X
Design For X
Design For X
Professor Richard Lee Storch IND E 494 Design in the Manufacturing Firm
Reference
Ulrich, K. & Eppinger, S. (2000). Product Design and Development. Boston, MA: Irwin McGraw-Hill.
DFM Method
Proposed Design Estimate the Manufacutring Costs
Good enough ? Y
Acceptable Design
DFM Method
Estimate the manufacturing costs. Reduce the costs of components. Reduce the costs of assembly. Reduce the costs of supporting production. Consider the impact of DFM decisions on other factors.
Manufacturing System
Finished Goods
Energy
Supplies
Services
Waste
Standard
Custom
Labor
Support
Indirect Allocation
Raw Material
Processing
Tooling
Assembly Costs (labor, equipment, & tooling) Overhead Costs (all other costs)
Support Costs (material handling, quality assurance, purchasing, shipping, receiving, facilities, etc.) Indirect Allocations (not directly linked to a particular product but must be paid for to be in business)
Eliminate unnecessary steps. Use substitution steps, where applicable. Analysis Tool Process Flow Chart and Value Stream Mapping
DFA Systems
Boothroyd Dewhurst DFM & A Munro & Assoc. (Design Prophet/Profit) Others
Production Input
At various design stages
Concept
Production Input
Functional
None
Transition
Tactics
Work Instruction
Production Preparation
Types of Prototypes
Two dimensions
Physical vs. Analytical Comprehensive vs. Focused
Analytical
Represents the product in a nontangible, usually mathematical manner Product is analyzed, not built
Focused
Implement a few of the attributes of the product Use two or more focused prototypes together to investigate the overall performance of a product
Prototype Uses
Learning
Will it work? How well does it meet the customer needs?
Communication
Within the company With customers, vendors, and suppliers
Integration
Subsystems and components work together
Milestones
Product achieved a desired level of functionality
Principles of Prototyping
Analytical Prototypes are generally more flexible than Physical Prototypes Physical Prototypes are required to detect unanticipated phenomena A Prototype may reduce the risk of costly iterations A Prototype may expedite other development steps A Prototype may restructure task dependencies
High
Low
Low
Prototyping Technologies
3D Computer Modeling
Easily visualize the 3D form of the design Automatically compute physical properties Other more focused descriptions can be created based on one design Detect geometric interference among parts
Milestone Prototypes
Alpha Prototypes assess whether the product works as intended Beta Prototypes assess reliability and to identify any bugs in the product Preproduction Prototypes first products produced by the entire production process