D-Lab Design for Human Use
Ergonomics Ease of use Ease of maintenance Number of interactions Novelty of interactions Safety
Battery Maintenance
Design for as many target users as possible
Consequences of bad design
Ergonomics Ease of use Ease of maintenance Number of interactions Novelty of interactions Safety
Micro-Flail Time and Motion Comparison Probing- 2-6 minutes Set up flail – 15 seconds Walk away – 90 seconds Run flail – 10 seconds Walk back – 90 seconds Finish operation – 15 seconds Total ~4 minutes
Charcoal Briquette Making Time and Motion Study Total = ~4 hours
Briquette Making
Original prototype in use
Break process into steps 1.Load charcoal 2.Hammer 3.Eject Briquette
Define the steps 1.Load charcoal – until hand releases scoop 2.Hammer – until hand releases hammer 3.Eject Briquette –until hand releases pin
Time study data (seconds)
Time trial data
What took so long?
Hammering Pick up hammer Pick up piston Insert piston Hammer Remove piston Set down piston Set down hammer
New designs No corners in compaction area (no cleaning necessary) Piston hangs in top of tube (don’t remove and set down piston) One handed eject door (don’t set down hammer) Use hammer to open eject door (eliminate the closing pin) Estimated speed = 5 Briquettes per Minute (BPM) (old machine 2 BPM) Alternate design: Two pistons Estimated speed = 5.4 to 6.6 BPM, depending on the loading method. Conclusion: second piston is not worth the added complexity
New machine 2.5x faster
New machine time breakdown
More people 5.5x faster
Comparison between machines
External: Compare your product to other products to see what the benefits are (or are not). Internal: See if your product is efficient, and identify the best places for improvements. Types of time studies: