Abstract
DFA (Design for Assembly) is important in that it potentially can reduce the estimated 15-70% of manufacturing cost that is attributable to assembly. Besides the reduction in cost, DFA promises additional benefits in increased quality, increased reliability, and shorter manufacturing time. While there has been considerable interest in DFA, the research that has been reported in this area tends to suffer from a considerable handicap, namely that the work reported focuses primarily on DFA, without taking the other Concurrent Engineering (CE) aspects associated with the product fully into account. Therefore it is quite possible, for example, to use DFA approaches to redesign a product so that it is a good design from the perspective of assembly but where the redesign is difficult, time consuming or expensive to manufacture or test. Part of the difficulty in including perspectives, other than that of assembly, is the resulting complexity caused by the multitude of different considerations that have to be taken into account. This paper aims to address this problem by developing a methodology that models the different considerations as an abstracted network, called a CE-Nets. The CE-Nets, a variant of Petri Nets, only uses that information which is pertinent to DFA and therefore substantially reduces the problem of complexity. The basis of CE-Nets is described in the paper and an example is given. The CE-Nets approach offers three main potential advantages. First, it offers the potential of including other CE perspectives in a DFA system, without undue complexity. Second, it is a graphical approach that allows users to examine the interaction between different considerations. Third, it applies a mathematical mechanism to the problem, with the potential of being relatively straightforward to computerize.
Original language | English (US) |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | 231-243 |
Number of pages | 13 |
Journal | Concurrent Engineering Research and Applications |
Volume | 7 |
Issue number | 3 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Sep 1999 |
Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- Concurrent engineering
- Cost
- Design for assembly
- Design for manufacturing
- Lead time
- Petri Nets
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Modeling and Simulation
- Engineering(all)
- Computer Science Applications