
Product Design
Pearson (Publisher)
Published on 15. January 2001
Book
Paperback/Softback
1104 pages
978-0-13-021271-9 (ISBN)
Shipment within 15-20 days
Description
Product Design presents an in-depth study of structured designed processes and methods. KEY TOPICS: Fundamental approach is that reverse engineering and teardowns offer a new better paradigm for design instruction, permitting a modern learning cycle of experience, hypothesis, understanding, and then execution. MARKET: For practicing engineers interested in learning about mechanical design. FEATURES/BENEFITS *Fundamental approach is that reverse engineering and teardowns offer a new better paradigm for design instruction, permitting a modern learning cycle of experience, hypothesis, understanding, and then execution. *Concrete experiences with hands-on products. *Applications of contemporary technologies. *Studies of systematic experimentation. *Exploration of the boundaries of design methodology. *Decision making for real product development. *Discusses the foundation material of product design, including a philosophy for learning and implementing product design methods. *Each chapter includes both basic and advanced techniques for particular phases of product development.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Pearson Education (US)
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 243 mm
Width: 186 mm
Thickness: 44 mm
Weight
1684 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-13-021271-9 (9780130212719)
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
New editions
Kevin N. Otto | Kristin L. Wood
Product Design
Book
02/2013
2nd Edition
Pearson
€59.41
Article is exhausted; no reprint
Content
1. Journeys in Product Development.
2. Product Development Process Tools.
3. Scoping Product Developments: Technical and Business Concerns.
4. Understanding Customer Needs.
5. Establishing Product Function.
6. Product Teardown and Experimentation.
7. Benchmarking and Establishing Engineering Specifications.
8. Product Portfolios and Portfolio Architecture.
9. Product Architecture.
10. Generating Concepts.
11. Concept Selection.
12. Concept Embodiment.
13. Modeling of Product Metrics.
14. Design for Manufacture and Assembly.
15. Design for the Environment.
16. Analytical and Numerical Model Solutions.
17. Physical Prototypes.
18. Physical Models and Experimentation.
19. Design for Robustness.
2. Product Development Process Tools.
3. Scoping Product Developments: Technical and Business Concerns.
4. Understanding Customer Needs.
5. Establishing Product Function.
6. Product Teardown and Experimentation.
7. Benchmarking and Establishing Engineering Specifications.
8. Product Portfolios and Portfolio Architecture.
9. Product Architecture.
10. Generating Concepts.
11. Concept Selection.
12. Concept Embodiment.
13. Modeling of Product Metrics.
14. Design for Manufacture and Assembly.
15. Design for the Environment.
16. Analytical and Numerical Model Solutions.
17. Physical Prototypes.
18. Physical Models and Experimentation.
19. Design for Robustness.