Mike Rush, Scott Foremen, Linda Rosato, Ben Gao.  Design Task  Survey Pie Chart  Design Matrix  Design Matrix Weighted  Design Modifications  E.

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Presentation transcript:

Mike Rush, Scott Foremen, Linda Rosato, Ben Gao

 Design Task  Survey Pie Chart  Design Matrix  Design Matrix Weighted  Design Modifications  E Waste  E Waste Chart  E Waste Health Effects  Composition of Camera  Cost Analysis  Prototype  Conclusion  Questions  References

 There is currently a declining demand for Disposable Camera’s.  We want to create a larger market by modifying the camera to create a larger demand for the product.  We found during our customer needs assessment that: ◦ Potential customers want a modernized camera ◦ Potential customers want to be able to reuse the camera  Design Specifications: ◦ manufacturing the camera out of recycled materials ◦ changing the flash to solar powered instead of battery powered ◦ replacing the film with a USB capable storage stick

Storage Stick Replaceable Batteries Screen to view pictures Manufacture out of recycled materials Solar Power Flash Manufacturing Cost Ease of Handling Durability Consumer Price Life extension Environmental Factors/Eco Friendly Total

WeightStorage Stick Manufacture out of recycled materials Solar Power Flash Manufacturing Cost Ease of Handling Durability Consumer Price Life extension Environmental Factors/Eco Friendly Total Score X Rank X132 Continue? Xyesnoyes

Modify the Fuji camera by:  manufacturing the camera out of recycled materials  changing the flash to solar powered  replacing the film with a USB capable storage stick These modifications were decided upon based on:  the life extension factors  ease of handling factors  environmental factors (Modifying the design to enable the consumer to replace the battery was disregarded due to the amount of E waste it would generate)

 What is it? ◦ The popular, informal name for electronic products nearing the end of their "useful life.“  How much E Waste is generated ◦ In 2005, used or unwanted electronics amounted to approximately 1.9 to 2.2 million tons  Where does E waste end up? In 2000: ◦ Landfills million tons were put into landfills ◦ Incinerators – 250 million products were incinerated ◦ Storage million products were put into storage ◦ Recycled - 345,000 to 379,000 tons were recycled

 Acetonitrile ◦ nausea, vomiting, slow pulse rate, coma  Ethylene Glycol ◦ central nervous system, heart, kidneys  Dichloromethane ◦ carbon monoxide poisoning, optic neuropathy, hepatitis, chemical burns, skin irritation, cancer, birth defects, fetal toxicity  N,N Dimethyleformamide ◦ cancer, birth defects, liver abnormalities  Toluene ◦ tiredness, confusion, weakness, drunken-type actions, memory loss, nausea, loss of appetite, and hearing and color vision loss

 Solar Flash ◦ Solar Cell is $2-$3 ◦ Battery is $0.75  Removable Stick ◦ $6.50/1 ◦ $3.18/ 1 (wholesale)

Outer Appearance Individual Parts Dimensions and Break Down

 VIEW DRAWN PROTOTYPE

 Modifications: ◦ Solar powered flash ◦ Removable memory stick ◦ Composed of recycled materials

Questions?

  tronics/the-e-waste-problem/where-does-e-waste-end-up/ tronics/the-e-waste-problem/where-does-e-waste-end-up/      _001.pdf _001.pdf