chapter 4 understand the problem and the development of engineering specification
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Chapter 4Understand the problem and the
development of engineering specification
4.1 Introduction
介紹朋友的條件條件 :
要帥要有車
History of Optical disk• 1980年荷蘭飛利浦公司與日本新力公司共同發表全球第一片 CD (Compact Disc CD光碟機 )
• CD-ROM光碟機 ---儲存量大,不可一世 • CD-I互動光碟機 ---應用軟體少,提前腰斬 • PHOTO CD光碟機 ---市場接受度,寥寥可數 • VCD光碟機 --- 儲存應用廣,曾風光一度 • DVD影音光碟機 ---多功能技術,一枝獨秀 • 可錄製一次光碟機標準 (CD-R)• 可重複讀寫型光碟機標準 (CD-RW)。• DVD-ROM---儲存量更大,前景無限
• 答案 :象棋
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4-2 QFD (Quality Function Deployment)
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Steps of QFDStep 1: Identify the customs: Who are theyStep 2: Determine the customer requirementStep 3: Determine relative importance of the requirements:
Who Versus WhatStep 4: Identify and evaluate the competition: How satisfied is
the customer nowStep 6: Relate customers’ requirements to engineering
specifications: how to measure what?Step 7 Set engineering targets: How much is good enough?Step 8: Identify relationships between engineering
requirements: How are the hows dependent on each other?
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Collection method for customers’ requirement
Three ways to collect:
• Observation,• Surveys, • Focus group
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Example questions including in the survey are:
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The type of Customers’ requirements
4.3 Step 1: Identify the customs: Who are they
4.4 Step 2: Determine the customer requirement
1. Customer requirement2. Production customer want-Easy to manufacturing3. Marketing/sales customer wan-Easy to package, transport, is attractive, is
suitable to display
4.4.1 the Kano model of customer satisfaction
3.3.2 Collection method for customers’ requirement
Three way to collect:
• Observation,• Surveys, • Focus group
Step to help the design team develop useful data
Example questions including in the survey are:
4.4.3 The type of Customers’ requirements
Scale 1 to 10
4.5 Step 3: Determine relative importance of the requirements: Who Versus What
4.6 Step 4: Identify and evaluate the competition: How satisfied is the customer now
Rate the design on a scale of 1 to 5
1. The product does not meet the requirement at all.
2. The product meets the requirement slightly.
3. The product meets the requirement somewhat.
4. The product meets the requirement mostly.
5. The product meets the requirement completely.
4.7 Step 5: Generate engineering specifications: How will the customers’
requirements be meet?
4.8 Step 6: Relate customers’ requirements to engineering
specifications: how to measure what?
4.9 Step 7: Set engineering targets: How much is good enough?
4.10 Step 8: identify relationships between engineering requirements:
How are the hows dependent on each other?
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