2019 SAE Corporate Learning Aero Resource Guide - P18295967

ENGINEERING TOOLS AND METHODS

receive specific guidance and tools to assist them in tailoring Design Reviews to reflect their own organization’s requirements. Topics are applicable to a broad range of new product development programs, ranging from components to complete systems, for both OEMs and suppliers. LEARN THEN DO - In this workshop the attendee not only learns the essential elements of a robust Design Review process but also has the opportunity to apply these principles in the conduct of a mock Design Review. Participants will also experience some of the frequently encountered real-world issues that distract from accomplishing good results. During these reviews the attendee will experience each of the roles in a typical Design Review; leader, facilitator, recorder, and participant. An after-action review will be performed following each DR session to discuss positive outcomes and identify opportunities for improvement. Learning Objectives By attending this seminar, you will be able to: • Describe the relationship of the process to concurrent engineering and knowledge management • Establish the requirements for a successful Design Review process • Describe the types and timing of reviews • Organize a typical Design Review • Conduct a review and get positive results Who Should Attend The workshop is designed for individuals who are involved in the development of new products and who seek to improve that process. Product development team members including, but not limited to, directors, manager, project and program managers, design, development, process, product, quality, and application engineers will find the course valuable. It is aimed primarily at engineers and managers who will be facilitating or leading such reviews, but will also benefit manufacturing, marketing and purchasing personnel.

SESSION THREE • Review of Exercise Assigned at the end of the Session 2 • The Confounding Principle • The Benefits and Disbenefits of Confounding and of Partial Factorial Experiments • How Confounding Occurs in a DOE, including Generators and “Design Resolution” Importance of the “Alias String” • Minitab Demonstration: Setting up Partial Factorial Experiments using Default Generators and by Specifying Generators • Assignment for Session 4: Partial Factorial Exercise using Minitab and a Simulator to Generate Data for the DOE SESSION FOUR • Review of Exercise Assigned at the end of the Session 3 • When Robust/Taguchi DOE is Appropriate • How Robust/Taguchi DOE is Different −− Two-Step Optimization Concept −− Control vs. Noise −− Importance of Control-by-Noise Interactions −− Studying Robustness with Classical DOE vs. Taguchi −− Taguchi’s Robustness Statistics: Signal-to-Noise (S/N) and Loss −− Applications of Taguchi DOE (incl. Set-up and Analysis in Minitab) −− Minitab Demonstration: Setting Up a Taguchi DOE −− Assignment for Session 5: Robust/DOE Exercise using Minitab and a Simulator

Instructor: Fee: $835

Kevin Zielinski

1.2 CEUs

URL:

sae.org/learn/content/wb0932/ or sae.org/learn/content/pd330932on/

Design Review Workshop 1.5 Days | Classroom Seminar I.D.# C1306

Topical Outline DAY ONE Design Review Process • Why Design Reviews Should be Part of a Product Development Process

In today’s highly competitive and liability minded environment, Design Reviews (DR) are a must for all major mobility industries such as Automotive, DOD, Aerospace, Agriculture, Recreation, Marine and Rail. While Design Reviews are becoming increasingly important in product liability litigation, they also serve as an effective way to transfer organizational best practices for specific concerns and issues. This hands-on workshop describes how formal Design Reviews can be used in conjunction with other new product development methods to improve product designs by uncovering potential problems before they are discovered at a later stage of development or application when the costs of correction are much higher. A range of effective techniques for organizing and conducting Design Reviews will be presented. Participants will

−− Market and quality drivers −− Schedule and cost drivers −− Litigation considerations • Outline of the Design Review Process −− Design reviews as part of an overall risk management process −− What design reviews are and are not • Types and Timing of Reviews −− Concept reviews −− Preliminary reviews −− Critical reviews −− Production readiness reviews −− Other types of reviews

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3 ways to get a no-obligation price quote to deliver a course to your company: Call SAE Corporate Learning at +1.724.772.8529  |  Fill out the online quote request at sae.org/corplearning  |  Email us at Corplearn@sae.org

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