Title: Product Design Specification
1Product Design Specification
2Before we consider exactly what a Product Design
Specification (PDS) is, let's do a short design
project.
DESIGN BRIEF A customer has approached your team
and asked to produce a chair for his son.
Read the design brief above and spend five
minutes producing a design that you feels fulfils
the brief. When you are happy raise your hand.
3Is this your design?
Is this your design?
Is this your design?
Are you sure you understand the question?
Is this your design?
Is this your design?
Is this your design?
4- Easy to misinterpret a design brief and design a
product the customer doesn't want. -
- The aim of the PDS is to help you to gain an
understanding of the nature of the problem - The more we know about the problem the easier it
will be to produce a final design that works
first time - The PDS will help you understand the problem
before you start your design.
5 6 7- A Project Design Specification (PDS) is a
document that will change substantially over the
duration of your project. - There are many factors that will cause your PDS
to change. But the one factor that will have the
greatest impact is the development of a deeper
understanding of your project. - The PDS should reflect the common knowledge of
the team about the project idea. - The PDS needs to be regularly refined during the
proposal phase to reflect a deeper understanding
of your teams project idea. To develop this
deeper understanding your team needs to do
research.
8- RESEARCH
- To develop a deeper understanding your design
team needs to begin by performing research. - U.S. Patents
- Market Studies
- Logan Library (Has anyone from your team seen Mr.
Robson?) - This research will be the foundation of your PDS.
From your initial research your team was asked to
develop a HLDD (high level design document).
9- With the research, performance and environmental
specifications need to be developed for your
project. - These performance and environmental
specifications need to accurately reflect your
teams present understanding of the project and
to be as specific as possible about what the
project will do. - Performance specifications address a need. For
examples, a pipe positioning system must deliver
accuracies of /- 5 inches for each linear mile
of pipe placed. - Environmental specification addresses the
surroundings and conditions of operation. For
example, the pipe positioning system will use
trenchless technology to place pipe underground.
10- INTRODUCTION TO PRODUCT DESIGN SPECIFICATIONS
- What is the function of your project? At this
point it is best to have a few functions for your
project. Keeping in mind, each function expands
the project scope and your team needs to be able
to complete the project in 25-weeks. Each
function should have several performance
specifications to measure the success of the
function - Performance specifications address needs. For
examples, a pipe positioning system will deliver
accuracies of /- 5 inches for each linear mile
of pipe placed underground. The performance
specifications also help define the environment
your project will operate in. Therefore,
environmental specifications are needed to define
the operating environment like, underground. - Environmental specification addresses the
surroundings and conditions of operation. For
example, the pipe positioning system will use
trenchless technology to place pipe underground.
The environmental specification finally helps
define technology specifications like,
trenchless. - Technology specification defines the type of
technologies that are being considered. These
technologies are defined by the research done.
11- INTRODUCTION TO PRODUCT DESIGN SPECIFICATIONS
- A good PDS has a function list for the project
with a short description for each
project-function. Each function has several
performance specifications (measures of success)
along with the environment these functions
operate in. Finally, the PDS should identify what
technologies will be used to meet the performance
and environmental specification for each function
of the project. Therefore, the following
questions must be answered for each PDS - Is a function list given with a short description
for each project-function? - Are performance specification given for each
function? - Is the operating environment for the project
given? - Are specifications provided relating to the
operating environment provided? - Are target technologies identified to meet all of
above? - Example PDS
- http//www.ider.herts.ac.uk/school/courseware/desi
gn/pds/example.html
12Product Development Process
Stage 1 Needs, IP, Market Analysis, System
Definition, Requirements Specification
Needs, IP and Market Analysis
System Definition
Requirements Specs - PDS
High Level Design
Conceptual Design
Detail Design
Stage 2 Design
Stage 3 Planning, Scheduling, Budget,
Personnel Qualifications
Planning, WBS, Scheduling
Budget Resources
Personnel Qualifications
Stage 4 Project Management, Test Plan,
Performance Verification
Project Management
Performance Verification
Test Plan
Social Impact
Stage 5 Social Impact, Risks
Contingencies, and Quality
Risks and Contingencies
Quality
Stage 6 Success!!!
Development Grant
13Conceptual Design
Generate ideas about HOW to fulfill the PDS. What
materials, technologies and processes will be
used? Will you use a tried and true approach or
will you try a potentially revolutionary, yet
unproven, approach? Evaluate ideas Pugh Matrix
Method or Engineering Tradeoff Matrix
14Generation of Ideas
15 16Generation of Ideas
- Clarify the Problem Identify the problem
decompose to simpler problems - Search Externally Experts, patents, published
literature, related products MR. ROBSON!!! - Search Internally Group and individual creative
exercises - Explore Systematically Organize thinking and
synthesize system fragments - Reflect on Solutions Process Identify areas
for improvements in later iterations and
subsequent projects
17Evaluation of Ideas
- Evaluation Criteria are established before any
evaluations are made. - Evaluation Criteria come from the PDS.
- Evaluation Criteria are unambiguous.
- Evaluation Criteria are to evaluate, not to
optimize different approaches.
18Pugh Matrix Technique I
- Set up a matrix (table) with concepts across the
columns and criteria across the rows. - Rate each concept against important evaluation
criteria (generated from PDS).
19Pugh Matrix Technique II
- Choose a reference concept without any prior
solution, choose the one the group intuitively
thinks is the best. - Enter a PLUS () if a concept is better than the
datum enter a MINUS (-) if a concept is worse
than the datum enter an S if a concept is the
same as the datum. - Total the PLUSes and MINUSes for each concept and
obtain the algebraic sum for each concept.
20Evaluation of Ideas Pugh Method
21Pugh Matrix Technique III
- Carefully look at the pattern of MINUSes try to
generate improvements to the concept without
eroding the PLUSes. - If a number of strong concepts do not emerge,
usually the criteria are ambiguous or subject to
different interpretations or concepts are
similar. - When one concept is strongest, re-run the matrix
using it as the datum to validate it as the
strongest.
22Pugh Matrix Technique IV
- Greater insight into the requirements of the PDS.
- Greater understanding of the design problems.
- Greater understanding of the potential solutions.
- Understanding of the interaction between the
solutions. - Knowledge of why one concept is stronger or
weaker than another. - Natural stimulus to generate other concepts.
23Detail Design
- Specific details are determined.
- The sort of design in individual courses, but
with interactions between subsystems. - Subsystems and components must be defined in a
similar manner to the PDS. - Generate Component Design Specification (CDS)
with emphasis on local performance, environment,
and constraints. - Primary emphasis is upon performance.