SIG-Library

Query returned 11501 results.

MODULARITY BY DISTRIBUTION - THE DEVELOPMENT OF A MOBILE ROBOT PROTOTYPE PLATFORM

Blackenfelt, Michael; Andersson, S6ren // 1998
This is a study of a leg-based mobile robot prototype which has been designed based on the specified requirements for both variant leg and variant foot principles. Modular design was emphasised from ...

MODULARITY IN USE - EXPERIENCES FROM FIVE COMPANIES

Stake, Roger B.; Blackenfelt, Michael // 1998
Modularisation of a product family may be done for various reasons, to various degrees and by using various approaches. A modular product family may be the result of a conscious redesign of an ...

Multikriterielle Bewertung von Baustrukturvarianten

Adunka, Robert; Wartzack, Sandro // 1998

Problemlösungsebenen im Konstruktionsprozess

Klose, J.; Musoro, R. // 1998

PRODUCT FAMILIES; THE PARADIGM OF THE ORDER ENTRY POINT.

Bikker, Henk; van Till, Roelf // 1998
The paradigm of the Order Entry Point recognizes the necessity of anticipating the external needs from the market and the internal needs from design and manufacturing, to act partly on prognosis and ...

SPECIFYING RELATIONSHIPS IN PRODUCT FAMILIES TO ENABLE STEP-BASED IMPLEMENTATIONS

McKay, Alison; de Pennington, Alan // 1998
If companies are to gain advantage from adopting STEP (STandard for the Exchange of Product model data [ISO303]) then the gap between the application context of an Application Protocol (AP) and the ...

SUPPORTING THE DESIGN OF PRODUCT FAMILIES THROUGH CONSTRAINT-BASED REASONING

O'Sullivan, Barry // 1998
A product family can be regarded as a collection of products which are similar - similarity being defined from a number of perspectives. For example, a collection of products may be regarded as a ...

THE CHART OF MODULAR FUNCTION DEPLOYMENT

Nilsson, Per; Erixon, Gwmar // 1998
The deployment and use of a design method is dependent on the availability of the method. Easy available tools, largely increases its usefulness. Simplicity and clearness together with an easy ...

Toleranz-gesteuerte Randbedingungen für die Finite-Elemente-Methode

Hochmuth, Rüdiger; Schweiger, Willy // 1998

A FRAMEWORK FOR THE CHARACTERIZATION OF PRODUCT STRUCTURES

McKay, Alison // 1997
The integration of the multiple product structures that typically ()u.:ur in a busi­ness process is one way in which the business process itself may be enhanced. As with the integration of ...

Basic Thinking Patterns and Working Methods for multiple DFX

Andreasen, Mogens Myrup; Mortensen, Niels Hendrik // 1997

BREAKDOWN OF SPECIFICATIONS TO SUPPORT SELECTION BETWEEN EMBODIMENT ALTERNATIVES

Schachinger, Peter // 1997
Among engineering designers, interest has increased for some years in integrating several functions into one component (parts count reduction). On the other hand, a component will be to costly to ...

Digital Mock-up bei der Entwicklung mechatronischer Produkte

Schweiger, Willy; Schön, Achim // 1997

Eine Einführung in die Taguchi Methode

Hundal ,Mahenda S. // 1997

Boolean Searches

The following examples demonstrate some search strings that use boolean operators:

  • design community
    Find rows that contain at least one of the two words.
  • +design +community
    Find rows that contain both words.
  • +design community
    Find rows that contain the word “design”, but rank rows higher if they also contain “community”.
  • +design -community
    Find rows that contain the word “design” but not “community”.
  • +design ~community
    Find rows that contain the word “design”, but if the row also contains the word “community”, rate it lower than if row does not.
  • +design +(>community <decisions)
    Find rows that contain the words “design” and “community”, or “design” and “decisions” (in any order), but rank “design community” higher than “design decisions”
  • design*
    Find rows that contain words such as “design”, “designs”, “designing”, or “designer”.
  • "some words"
    Find rows that contain the exact phrase “some words” (for example, rows that contain “some words of wisdom” but not “some noise words”). Note that the " characters that enclose the phrase are operator characters that delimit the phrase. They are not the quotation marks that enclose the search string itself.

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