Help support MIT OpenCourseWare by shopping at Amazon.com! MIT OpenCourseWare offers direct links to Amazon.com to purchase the books cited in this course. Click on the Amazon logo to the left of any citation and purchase the book from Amazon.com, and MIT OpenCourseWare will receive up to 10% of all purchases you make. Your support will enable MIT to continue offering open access to MIT courses. |
Guidelines for the term project are as follows:
Buy a small assembled product costing no more than ~$35 and having 10 to 20 parts
Be sure you can take it apart and put it back together
Save the packaging and instructions
SDM students can use a product from work
You will analyze it in detail technically and economically and design an assembly line
Lecture 3 hand in a description of what you bought and names/e-mails of team members
Examples: hand-held power tools, small clocks and timers, Luxo lamps, small home appliances, toys
Schedule a time to show it to me for an hour ASAP
Hand in Request for Payment to get reimbursed
Summary of Systematic Process (PDF)
Project Deliverables
The project is completed in six incremental steps. Each step culminates in a report that must be handed in at the assigned lecture session.
Report 1: Completely describe the product
Report 2: Datum Flow Chain (DFC) analysis of the product
Report 3: Choreograph each assembly step and Design for Assembly (DFA)
Report 4: Create a floor layout
Report 5: Design a workstation
Report 6: Economic analysis and discrete event simulation of your system
Detailed Project Deliverables (PDF)
Examples of student project work can be found on the CD that is included with the course text: Whitney, Daniel E. Mechanical Assemblies: Their Design, Manufacture, and Role in Product Development. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2004. ISBN: 9780195157826.