Lecture 3 - Design Specifications, Functions and Components
Lecture 3 - Design Specifications, Functions and Components
SPECIFICATIONS
The Description of a Design…
USER REQUIREMENTS
▪ Machines are designed to fulfil the needs/requirements expressed by users
▪ User Requirements are defined as:
▪ Identifiable capabilities expressed as performance measurables of functions that the
system must possess to meet the mission objectives
▪ Attributes of the final design that must be a part of any acceptable solution to the
design problem
▪ An externally observable characteristic of a desired system
SPECIFICATIONS AS A DEFINITION
▪ The Machine does its work to achieve a said objective
▪ The machine’s ability to fulfil this objective is however, not unlimited
▪ The machine has limits described by its:
▪ Strength
▪ Speed
▪ Capacity to store material
▪ Capacity to withstand heat
▪ Dimensions
▪ Power
▪ Torque, etc
QUALITATIVE ASPECTS OF DESIGN
SPECIFICATIONS
▪ There are several categories that describe the User Requirements that need to be
fulfilled by a machine or product
▪ The following list gives examples of some of the categories and how they apply
QUANTITATIVE ASPECTS OF DESIGN
SPECIFICATIONS
▪ The limitations present in a machine thus describe the boundaries of
the machine that affect how it fulfils the objective
▪ Thus specifications are a measure of the machine and as such are
described by quantities/qualities that measure an aspect of the
machine
▪ Examples include:
▪ A 2.0 litre engine
▪ A mill that has a crushing load capacity of 30 tons/hr
▪ A 4GHz Octa-core processor
▪ A 20 Hp Electric Motor
▪ A 5000 ML dam/reservoir
EXAMPLE OF APPROPRIATE USER REQUIREMENTS
▪ Specifications are technical descriptors of the machine
▪ These are obtained from the need by converting what the need entails into what
the Engineer understands to be HOW the need may be fulfilled.
▪ Specifications should be complete, unambiguous, precise, and verifiable
CONVERTING USER REQUIREMENTS INTO
DESIGN SPECIFICATIONS
▪ Design/Machine Specifications are described as the detailed operation and attributes
of a system that are used as the basis of the design concept.
▪ Engineering Attributes and Specifications can be derived from User Requirements
through the use of the method: Quality Function Deployment
QUALITY FUNCTION DEPLOYMENT
THE METHOD
▪ Quality Function Deployment (QFD) is a method useful in translating
user requirements into engineering attributes
▪ The method is part of a larger teaching of Quality Management courses
regarded as the House of Quality
▪ QFD is a process and set of tools used to effectively define customer
requirements and convert them into detailed engineering specifications
QUALITY FUNCTION DEPLOYMENT
THE METHOD
▪ The QFD process has a set of requirements for it to be successfully executed:
▪ Defined User Requirements as collected using appropriate tools and methods
▪ Company Audit for the designer’s company processes and an audit of their competitors
company processes and products
▪ Customer/User surveys describing how the customer rates the product’s performance
or the importance of its key features
2. Measurable Noun
▪ Defines the object onto which the action operates
Secondary Function:
This set of functions assists in, or is necessary for, the realization of a Basic
Function
Secondary functions are subsets of basic functions
The combination of a set of secondary functions working together in a
complimentary fashion consists the basic function
A set of basic functions give us the solution overall function
CONSTRUCT FUNCTIONAL ANALYSIS SYSTEM TECHNIQUE
DIAGRAM LEFT TO RIGHT, AND CHECK IT RIGHT TO LEFT
Ask How?
Secondary Function
Secondary Function
Process of Construction:
1. Identify what you feel is the Basic Function.
2. Ask the question: “How is this Function actually accomplished?”
Place Secondary Functions to the right of the Basic Function.
3. Check the FAST diagram by starting at the right and working left. Ask
the question: “Why must this Function be performed?”
BASIC TO SECONDARY FUNCTIONS
▪ Examples of basic functions include:
▪ Pump – To lift water from a reservoir to where it is needed
▪ Phone – To communicate across long distances
▪ Battery – To store electrical energy
▪ Shoes – To protect the feet
__________________________________________________________________________
Secondary
To propel the fluid
Functions
To displace the fluid
To increase the
momentum of the fluid
To generate the
power
To provide the power
for momentum
increase
Basic Function
To minimise the pressure To provide a smooth
drop across the device change in direction
FUNCTIONS TO COMPONENTS
▪ The functions that describe how a design/machine is to operate must be
embodied in components
▪ A component/part serves to implement a function in a manner compliant to
the specifications of the design and derived from the design’s FAST diagram
▪ Examples of components include:
▪ Pump – Shaft
– Impeller
– Packing
– Rolling Bearings
▪ There are situations in which a standard part may be utilized (this is
recommended), and there are situations which require a novel part to be
designed.
SUMMARY OF POINTS