Written in a clear and readable style by an experienced author of teaching texts, Engineering Design Methods is an integrated design textbook that presents specific methods within an overall strategy from concept to detail design. It also outlines the nature of design thinking, and sets it within broader contexts of product development and design process management. The book is much more than a manual of procedures; throughout, there is discussion and explication of the principles and practice of design.Building on the outstanding success of the previous three editions, this new edition cements the position of Engineering Design Methods at the forefront of engineering and industrial design as an essential text not only for students and lecturers but also for practitioners. The book promotes a flexible approach to the design process, and provides explicit, step-by-step advice on how to implement several separate design methods that have been shown to be of value in both education and practice.This revised fourth edition -promotes a flexible approach to the design process,provides explicit, step-by-step advice on how to implement several separate design methods that have been shown to be of value in both education and practice,contains new case studies and examples from industry that further broaden the scope of the book from engineering design into product design,includes a significant new chapter presenting user scenarios; a procedure for investigating potential product user wants and needs, that culminates in a design brief identifying an opportunity for developing a new product concept,features a book companion website with powerpoint slides for instructors.Reviewers’ comments:“Engineering Design Methods… is a valuable contribution to the engineering design literature. The engineering design methods presented are those that are of practical significance and the book is a must for anyone wishing to raise the standard of their design work. The design methods are described clearly and succinctly, examples are used to illustrate principles and design strategies are presented that show how the methods are best employed”. Professor Graham Thompson, Department of Mechanical Engineering, UMIST, UK“Professor Nigel Cross’ treatment of Engineering Design is a singularly successful treatment for my courses because it is short and concise enough to be read by virtually all students. Furthermore, his interpretations are open enough to allow the inquiring mind to fill out the picture, incorporating and extending the ideas to fit the reflective designer’s own needs.” Professor Larry Leifer, Stanford Center for Design Reseach, Stanford University, USA“This book is an excellent book as a textbook for design methodology both for undergraduate and graduate level… Students will gain a firm foundation of design methods from problem definition to design evaluations from this book”. Professor Kun-Pyo Lee, Department of Industrial Design, Korea Institute of Science and Technology, Korea
Author(s): Nigel Cross
Edition: 4
Year: 2008
Language: English
Pages: 230
Front Matter......Page 2
Acknowledgements......Page 4
Introduction......Page 6
W......Page 0
72504_01......Page 9
1.1 Design Activities......Page 10
1.2 Design Problems......Page 18
1.3 Problem Structures......Page 22
2.1 What Designers Say......Page 26
2.2 How Designers Think......Page 28
2.3 Learning to Design......Page 32
3.1 Descriptive Models......Page 35
3.2 Prescriptive Models......Page 40
3.3 An Integrative Model......Page 48
72504_04......Page 49
4.1 Systematic Procedures......Page 50
4.2 Design Methods......Page 51
4.3 Creative Methods......Page 53
4.4 Rational Methods......Page 61
5. Clarifying Objectives......Page 65
5.1 The Objectives Tree Method......Page 66
6. Establishing Functions......Page 81
6.1 The Function Analysis Method......Page 82
7. Setting Requirements......Page 94
7.1 The Performance Specification Method......Page 95
8. Determining Characteristics......Page 110
8.1 The Quality Function Deployment Method......Page 111
9. Generating Alternatives......Page 126
9.1 The Morphological Chart Method......Page 127
10. Evaluating Alternatives......Page 142
10.1 The Weighted Objectives Method......Page 143
11. Improving Details......Page 165
11.1 The Value Engineering Method......Page 166
72504_12......Page 185
12.1 What is a Design Strategy?......Page 186
12.2 Frameworks for Action......Page 191
12.3 Strategy Control......Page 192
12.4 Setting Strategies and Choosing Tactics......Page 194
13.1 Product Design......Page 197
13.2 Product Planning......Page 198
13.4 Product Innovation......Page 202
13.5 Technology Push and Market Pull......Page 205
I......Page 208
W......Page 209
References and Sources......Page 210