A handy resource on the fundamental facts about engineering for both engineers and non-engineers alike, whether you are exploring engineering for the first time, already have a strong background, or fall anywhere in between.
Engineering impacts every aspect of our lives. Bridges,buildings, buses, electrical grids, computers, televisions, refrigerators, vacuum cleaners, and virtually any everyday household item needs to be engineered to function properly. Fundamentally, engineering is about identifying a need and developing solutions that meet that need. Throughout history, engineering ideas and innovative feats have provided solutions to many challenges faced by civilizations. From the Great Wall of China to NASA’s space program, The Handy Engineering Answer Book covers the history of the field, details the lives of key figures, introduces the tools engineers use to solve problems, and provides fun facts and answers to a thousand important and interesting questions, such as …
With more than 140 photos and graphics, this fascinating tome is richly illustrated. Its helpful bibliography and extensive index add to its usefulness. Whether using science and math or building prototypes for testing or the development of various subdisciplines, The Handy Engineering Answer Book looks at how fundamental engineering is to modern life and society!
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DeLean Tolbert Smith, Ph.D., is an assistant professor in the Industrial and Manufacturing Systems Engineering department at the University of Michigan-Dearborn. She earned her Ph.D. in engineering education from Purdue University, and her research led to a National Science Foundation CAREER award. She is a Detroit native and resides there with her husband.
Aishwary Pawar is a doctoral candidate in industrial & systems engineering at the University of Michigan-Dearborn. His research is focused on investigating the factors that influence undergraduate enrollment, retention, graduation, and dropout. For his Ph.D., he plans to incorporate human-centered design and data analytics to promote student success in undergraduate engineering programs and to support higher education professionals in recognizing minoritized students' diverse needs. A graduate student instructor at the University of Michigan-Dearborn, he teaches lab sessions in engineering and engineering design and resides in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.
Nicole P. Pitterson, Ph.D., is an assistant professor in the Department of Engineering Education at Virginia Tech. She has a Ph.D. in engineering education from Purdue University. She researches how curriculum design, testing, and teaching can boost students' understanding. She currently resides in Christiansburg, Virginia.
Debra-Ann C. Butler, Ph.D., received her bachelor of arts from the University of Miami and her Ph.D. in educational policy, planning, and leadership with a focus on higher education from William and Mary. Dr. Butler's career span over 20 years in higher education working in student services, academic affairs, and program administration. She currently resides in Michigan with her husband and two beautiful daughters.
What do engineers do?
Engineers work in a variety of contexts using their knowledge of mathematics and science to develop safe, economically sound and context specific solutions to everyday problems. These problems might be of various scales - small, medium, or large, and complexity. Engineering work is not always about creating new solutions as sometimes engineers work to improve and maintain existing systems and or processes.
Engineering practice falls into three broad categories:
What is Advanced Manufacturing?
Advanced manufacturing is the integration of new innovative technology and techniques to improve both product design and production processes, with the relevant/ advanced technology to facilitate, cost-effective and competitive products. These production processes highly depend on automation, networking, computation, and information. Thus, advanced manufacturing integrates the most up-to-date machinery with processes to add value and create highly differentiated products.
What is Agile Manufacturing?
Agile manufacturing is a strategy that focuses on responding quickly to the needs of the customer. The goal is to provide personalized products at unprecedented speeds while controlling the overall costs and maintaining high-quality standards. Industries that use agile manufacturing develop platforms for the designers, the marketers, and the production workforce to share information and updates about parts and products, production capacities, and problems particularly concerning the quality of a product to ensure that customers' needs are met.
What are the key elements of Agile Manufacturing?
The key elements of agile manufacturing include:
Why would an industry change from traditional manufacturing to agile manufacturing?
The rapidly evolving environment, constant technological development, more access to information, workforce transformation led to major shifts in the manufacturing industry and the adoption of agile manufacturing. Nowadays, companies are working in a highly competitive environment, where the small decline in performance, product quality, or product delivery can have a huge effect on a company's survival and reputation among consumers. Through agile manufacturing, companies take a competitive advantage while focusing on rapid response to customers and making fast changes based on customer demand.
What is automation?
Automation is the technology that helps to perform a procedure with minimal or no human assistance. People often think about robots when the concept of automating comes up in conversation. It is used in various control systems for operating applications ranging from simple on-off control such as a household thermostat controlling a boiler to a multi-variable high-level algorithm such as a large industrial control system. There are four different types of automation:
What are the manufacturing applications of automation and robotics?
Manufacturing and production are the most important applications for automation. Automated production systems are classified as Fixed automation, Programmable automation, and flexible automation. In the industrial workplace, automation helps in improving productivity and quality, reducing errors and waste, making the manufacturing process flexible, and thus increasing safety, reliability, and profitability. Automation can be achieved by various means including mechanical, hydraulic, pneumatic, electrical, electronic devices and computers, etc. The benefit of automation includes labor savings with lower operating costs, faster return on investment (ROI), Increased production output, improvements to quality, accuracy, and precision and reduced factory lead time.
What is benchmarking?
Benchmarking is a continuous process in which organizations continually seek to improve their practices. In this process, the performance of a company’s products, services, or procedures is measured against those of another business viewed as the best in the business, otherwise known as "top tier."
What is the purpose of benchmarking in engineering?
The purpose of benchmarking is to recognize internal opportunities for development. By considering organizations with superior performance, separating what makes such prevalent performance possible, and after that comparing those procedures with how your business works, you can implement changes that will yield significant improvements. Benchmarking can enable companies to gain an independent view about how well they perform contrasted with different organizations, it helps to recognize zones for continuous improvement, develop a standardized set of procedures, monitor organization performance and set performance expectations. It is typically performed because of requirements that emerge inside an organization.
Why would a manufacturing engineer benchmark?
Benchmarking is the practice of contrasting business procedures and performance metrics with industry bests and best practices from different organizations using a specific indicator bringing about a metric of performance which is then contrasted with others. Thus, Benchmarking enables you to concentrate on best practices from your rivals. It enables you to get point-by-point comparisons between organizations. The manufacturing engineering can use this information to make improvements on the production line (which type of automation is appropriate) that could save time and money.
How does an engineer benchmark?
Benchmarking is a straightforward but detailed process that involves the following steps:
What is a Bottleneck?
The term "bottleneck" typically refers to the neck or mouth of a bottle, and the fact that it is the narrowest point in a bottle, and the most likely place for the blockage to occur, slowing down the flow of liquid from the bottle. Manufacturing engineers define a bottleneck as a point of congestion/blockage that emerges when workloads arrive at a given machine/operation quicker than that machine/operation can handle them. Or more plainly, it is the step in the manufacturing process that takes the longest time to complete. This step, like the bottleneck in a bottle, slows down the flow of materials.
How does a bottleneck impact Manufacturing?
A bottleneck significantly impacts the flow of manufacturing, can create major delays and increase the expense of production. Organizations are more in danger of bottlenecks when they start the production procedure for new items in light of the fact that there might be imperfections in the process that must be recognized and adjusted; this circumstance requires more investigation and tweaking. Bottlenecks may likewise emerge when demand spikes unexpectedly and surpasses the production limit of a company's industrial facilities or suppliers.
What is an example of a bottleneck?
For example, recently Tesla confronted another bottleneck with its Model 3 pre-orders creating a backlog in production time. In 2017, Tesla’s CEO set a goal of producing 20,000 Tesla Model 3 vehicles each month. There were 500,000 people who reserved the vehicle. When the company was unable to produce the vehicles at this rate, it was discovered that the bottleneck in production was the battery quality and Tesla’s ability to produce enough batteries without defects.
Are there different types of bottlenecks?
There are two typical types of Bottlenecks in manufacturing: short and long-term. Short-term bottlenecks are temporary and are not typically a significant issue. A case of a short-term bottleneck would be a skilled worker taking a couple of days off. Long-term bottlenecks happen constantly and can significantly hinder production. A case of a long-term bottleneck is the point at which a machine isn't effective enough and thus has a long line. Thus, identifying bottlenecks is basic for improving the manufacturing production process since it enables you to decide and correct where accumulation happens.
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