机械设计过程 (英文版 原书第4版)

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作者: (美)乌尔曼 著

出 版 社: 机械工业出版社

出版时间: 2010-4-1字数: 568000版次: 1页数: 352印刷时间: 2010-4-1开本: 16开印次: 1纸张: 胶版纸I S B N : 9787111299011包装: 平装

机械设计过程 (英文版 原书第4版)
内容简介

本书明确提出了“产品设计”的设计技术,是针对产品设计的设计思想,理论.技术和方法,而对于那些针对“机构”和“零件结构”的设计技术,只作为基础知识介绍。

本书全面、具体地给出了“设计学”的基本内容,详细地引出了设计的典型步骤,每一个步骤的任务、目标,应考虑的主要问题和常用的解决方法,对产品设计具有很好的指导作用。

机械设计过程 (英文版 原书第4版)
目录

出版说明

PREFACE

CHAPTER 1 Why Study the Design Process?

1.1 Introduction

1.2 Measuring the Design Process with Product Cost, Quality, and Time to Market

1.3 The History of the Design Process

1.4 The Life of a Product

1.5 The Many Solutions for Design Problems

1.6 The Basic Actions of Problem Solving

1.7 Knowledge and Learning During Design

1.8 Design for Sustainability

CHAPTER 2 Understanding Mechanical Design

2.1 Introduction

2.2 Importance of Product Function, Behavior, and Performance

2.3 Mechanical Design Languages and Abstraction

2.4 Different Types of Mechanical Design Problems

2.5 Constraints, Goals, and Design Decisions

2.6 Product Decomposition

CHAPTER 3 Designers and Design Teams

3.1 Introduction

3.2 The Individual Designer: A Model of Human Information Processing

3.3 Mental Processes That Occur During Design

3.4 Characteristics of Creators

3.5 The Structure of Design Teams

3.6 Building Design Team Performance

CHAPTER 4 The Design Process and Product Discovery

4.1 Introduction

4.2 Overview of the Design Process

4.3 Designing Quality into Products

4.4 Product Discovery

4.5 Choosing a Project

CHAPTER 5 Planning for Design

5.1 Introduction

5.2 Types of Project Plans

5.3 Planning for Deliverables The Development of Information

5.4 Building a Plan

5.5 Design Plan Examples

5.6 Communication During the Design Process

CHAPTER 6 Understanding the Problem and the Development of

Engineering Specifications

6.1 Introduction

6.2 Step 1: Identify the Customers: Who Are They?

6.3 Step 2: Determine the Customers' Requirements: What Do the Customers Want?

6.4 Step 3: Determine Relative Importance of the Requirements: Who Versus What

6.5 Step 4: Identify and Evaluate the Competition: How Satisfied Are the Customers Now ?

6.6 Step 5: Generate Engineering Specifications: How Will the Customers' Requirement Be Met?

6.7 Step 6: Relate Customers' Requirements to Engineering Specifications: How to Measure What?

6.8 Step 7: Set Engineering Specification Targets and Importance: How Much Is Good Enough?

6.9 Step 8: Identify Relationships Between Engineering Specifications: How Are the Hows Dependent on Each Other?

6.10 Further Comments on QFD

CHAPTER 7 Concept Generation

7.1 Introduction

7.2 Understanding the Function of Existing Devices

7.3 A Technique for Designing with Function

7.4 Basic Methods of Generating Concepts

7.5 Patents as a Source of Ideas

7.6 Using Contradictions to Generate Ideas

7.7 The Theory of Inventive Machines, TRIZ

7.8 Other Important Concerns During Concept Generation

CHAPTER 8 Concept Evaluation and Selection

8.1 Introduction

8.2 Concept Evaluation Information

8.3 Feasibility Evaluations

8.4 Technology Readiness

8.5 The Decision Matrix--Pugh's Method

8.6 Product, Project, and Decision Risk

8.7 Robust Decision Making

CHAPTER 9 Product Generation

9.1 Introduction

9.2 BOMs

9.3 Form Generation

9.4 Materials and Process Selection

9.5 Vendor Development

9.6 Generating a Suspension Design for the Matin 2008 Mount Vision Pro Bicycle

CHAPTER 10 Product Evaluation for Performance and the Effects of Variation

10.1 Introduction

10.2 Monitoring Functional Change

10.3 The Goals of Performance Evaluation

10.4 Trade-Off Management

10.5 Accuracy, Variation, and Noise

10.6 Modeling for Performance Evaluation

10.7 Tolerance Analysis

10.8 Sensitivity Analysis

10.9 Robust Design by Analysis

10.10 Robust Design Through Testing

CHAPTER 11 Product Evaluation: Design For Cost, Manufacture,Assembly, and Other Measures

11.1 Introduction

11.2 DFC--Design For Cost

11.3 DFV Design For Value

11.4 DFM--Design For Manufacture

11.5 DFA Design-For-Assembly Evaluation

11.6 DFR Design For Reliability

11.7 DFT and DFM--Design For Test and Maintenance

11.8 DFElDesign For the Environment

CHAPTER 12 Wrapping Up the Design Process and Supporting the Product

12.1 Introduction

12.2 Design Documentation and Communication

12.3 Support

12.4 Engineering Changes

12.5 Design for End of Life

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