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Design for Manufacturing

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  • čas přidán 14. 08. 2024
  • After concept design comes design for manufacturing. In this phase, designers have to consider value engineering, maintain design intent, and source materials, manufacturers, and more. A truly great designer prioritizes strong collaboration with engineers and anticipatory problem solving that results in the manufacturing of high quality products with minimal loss rates and cycle times. To see some of the award-winning products designed and manufactured with this approach, visit nonfiction.des....
    Chapters
    0:00 Meet Phnam and Mardis Bagley
    0:33 What is design for manufacturing
    2:11 Value engineering
    3:44 Cycle time
    4:06 Loss rate
    4:22 Maintaining design intent
    5:36 Three types of engineers
    8:59 Documentation
    10:10 Sourcing
    11:44 Designers must understand manufacturing processes
    #futurefuture #nonfiction #manufacturing

Komentáře • 50

  • @Spaceizcool
    @Spaceizcool Před 2 lety +9

    This is amazing thank you so much! I wish there were engineering podcasts to dig into all this stuff because this is gold for entry level engineers like myself.

  • @onceappuonatime
    @onceappuonatime Před 3 lety +6

    Thank you for taking the initiative to address this side of Product Design. I feel like there is not enough Product Design knowledge out there for amateur design engineers. Those Human Headphones look really cool!

  • @rupeshchoudhari96
    @rupeshchoudhari96 Před 2 měsíci

    Pure gold info!

  • @danielhedu
    @danielhedu Před 3 lety +5

    Lesson #1 for me was to ALWAYS keep the wall thickness consistent, when designing for Injection Molding

  • @maniteja332
    @maniteja332 Před 2 lety +2

    Just an amazing video for all the Industrial Designers out there! Thanks a lot

    • @mardisbagley5072
      @mardisbagley5072 Před 2 lety

      Thanks. We try to share the knowledge. It will help us all create better products. Please share with your friends and colleagues.

  • @user-ws1si1rt4m
    @user-ws1si1rt4m Před rokem +1

    that was good easy to understand and detailed enuogh as an entrodaction

  • @bruceferris3183
    @bruceferris3183 Před 4 lety +7

    Excellent work . I love being a "yes, but" engineer. Your points about industrial designers needing to respect engineering realities is appreciated.

  • @dinisdesigncorner332
    @dinisdesigncorner332 Před rokem +1

    Great stuff

  • @billmeyer3049
    @billmeyer3049 Před 3 lety +2

    Excellent video, great information.

  • @gerardvongyw670
    @gerardvongyw670 Před 2 lety +1

    You are underrated will recommend your channel good content

    • @mardisbagley5072
      @mardisbagley5072 Před 2 lety

      Thank you so much. We are working on season 2 right now! Stay tuned.

  • @ind-auto
    @ind-auto Před 2 měsíci

    I wanted to share the quote that is displayed in this video - "Decide what good meant to you, then don't change your mind when things get hard." and wanted to give credit to the author - is that Rob Thompson who authored the book shown?

    • @mardisbagley
      @mardisbagley Před 2 měsíci

      Yes. The book is from Rob Thompson. The quote came from a good friend and ridiculously talented mechanical engineer, Joe Moak. I’m not sure if he’s the original author though.

  • @martinnavarro3224
    @martinnavarro3224 Před 2 lety +1

    Great !

  • @tt-rama2246
    @tt-rama2246 Před 4 lety +7

    Short feedback on the videos. I especially like the back and forth between the two of you, so much nicer than the often found monologues of youtubers. Also the level of depth and the way you explain process is valuable and makes it worth to watch. And videos are well structured 👍. To further improve, I would suggest to experiment with formats under 10 minutes. There is always another video.

    • @NonfictionDesign
      @NonfictionDesign  Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you so much for the kind words and suggestion! We totally agree. There is so much to say, so it's really hard to keep it short haha. We have an awesome team to keep us on track. It's been fun seeing the evolution between the first and last video :)

  • @NonfictionDesign
    @NonfictionDesign  Před 4 lety

    Share your stories with us! What are some manufacturing problems you've run into, and how were they resolved?

  • @kelRGo
    @kelRGo Před 9 dny

    Just found this video and I thought it was great, but why is there such a lapse till now??? What’s been going on?

  • @onceappuonatime
    @onceappuonatime Před 3 lety +2

    Could you please make a video series on communication please? Communication between ID and Design Engineers, and between Design Engineers and Manufacturers.

    • @NonfictionDesign
      @NonfictionDesign  Před 3 lety

      Great idea! We'll certainly discuss this in our next ideation meeting. Thanks for suggesting it to us.

  • @Salman_Alabd
    @Salman_Alabd Před 11 měsíci

    Wow that’s amazing explanation, i hope engineers start to produce high level content such as this

  • @pranitpopli9926
    @pranitpopli9926 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you, your content is really helping me.

  • @jacobhouston1655
    @jacobhouston1655 Před 3 lety +3

    Good shit.

  • @amazingtricks1980
    @amazingtricks1980 Před 2 lety

    I fall in love with her voice...😍😍😍❤❤❤

  • @shreedharmadagundi1921

    Crystal clear information

  • @nadafarid149
    @nadafarid149 Před rokem

    Maintaining Design Intent

  • @jdjagdish1
    @jdjagdish1 Před 4 lety +1

    Love your videos, thanks alot for teaching us! 😊

  • @SevenDeMagnus
    @SevenDeMagnus Před 2 lety +1

    Interesting.

  • @nadafarid149
    @nadafarid149 Před rokem

    Sourcing ( finding right manufacturer and partner)

  • @MrDtct
    @MrDtct Před 2 lety +1

    Great insight. Thanks.

    • @mardisbagley5072
      @mardisbagley5072 Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you! That's why we started the series.... to share valuable insights so we all can grow better, together.

  • @ProsoyoTech1997
    @ProsoyoTech1997 Před rokem

    Supper great video. Really inspring.

  • @ravitejareddy3309
    @ravitejareddy3309 Před 3 lety

    Well you kept the information brief and crisp. The way you explained was engaging and I loved it to core as I am also did my Masters in Design for Manufacture.
    Looking forward to see more engaging content!

  • @SUMITKUMAR-gr8vz
    @SUMITKUMAR-gr8vz Před rokem +1

    and i hitted 500th like

  • @yafedsaldivar6262
    @yafedsaldivar6262 Před rokem

    Awesome information! good guidance for best practices in product design... I was just wondering what is the name of the material catalog that you showed in Sourcing? I have search for SPI but its only for injection molding.... Thanks for the video and thanks if you can share this information.

    • @mardisbagley5072
      @mardisbagley5072 Před rokem

      Hi Yafed. Thanks for the kind comments. Glad you enjoyed the episode. The material book is from one of our model makers, Model Solution in S. Korea. We have been working with them for many years, so they gave us a book.

  • @nbyakdzingina4090
    @nbyakdzingina4090 Před rokem

    This is great I must confess. I want to ask what your best 3 CAD softwares are in your design journey

    • @mardisbagley5072
      @mardisbagley5072 Před rokem +1

      Hi Nbyak. Thanks for watching! We use 1. Rhino 3D because it has great surfaces, can import/export many formats, and is reasonably priced. 2. Autodesk Alias is the best at creating and manipulating complex surface geometry. Lots of car designers use it. It's really pricy though. 3. Fusion 360 is the best of all worlds. It does great surfacing, parametric modeling, has a great history tree, and we use it to output g-code for our CNC. We use many others, like Grasshopper and Gravity sketch too.

  • @nadafarid149
    @nadafarid149 Před rokem

    1 value Engineering (cost, material)

  • @tt-rama2246
    @tt-rama2246 Před 4 lety +1

    all of this is true for software too

    • @NonfictionDesign
      @NonfictionDesign  Před 4 lety +1

      Oooo tell us more. We're not as well versed in software.

    • @tt-rama2246
      @tt-rama2246 Před 4 lety +2

      @@NonfictionDesign Sure. I am User Experience Designer for software from Berlin. So the drafting process for software is called wireframing / UI prototyping. It can be done in different levels of fidelity and exploration goals. Also we build prototypes to communicate how things look (mockup prototypes/ui-dummies) and how things are meant to function (functional wireframe prototypes/click-prototypes).
      Manufacturing process for software is called implementation programming. Some components you may need to source (logic, sometimes even UI component kits such as material UI). And what you call the manufacturing engineer is called the frontend developer in software. The guy that materializes your concepts and ideas.
      It's really similar.

    • @NonfictionDesign
      @NonfictionDesign  Před 4 lety

      @@tt-rama2246 Awesome, thanks for sharing!

  • @bikashkumarlilha4469
    @bikashkumarlilha4469 Před 3 lety

    Both of you r great. Can I have your mail I'd