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Breadfruit Flour Grinder
Team P16482 Jared Farber Cody Jones AJ NaDell Liz Stoyan Andy Testa
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Agenda Team Introduction Background Problem Statement
Stakeholder Identification Use Scenario Customer Requirements Benchmarking Engineering Requirements House of Quality Risk Assessment Project Plan Draft
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Background Borgne, Haiti - agricultural economy
Breadfruit - short shelf life Begins to rot 1-3 days after ripe Preserve breadfruit - make flour Cooperative of farmers, 7 “sections” in Borgne One location to house breadfruit flour production for area Shredding and drying components solved Grinder development = last step
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Problem Statement Current State 1. University of Michigan attempt:
the hand crank extremely hard to turn a bucket was used as collection unit - was not sturdy rollers tended to slide out of place during operation 2. An MET design team from RIT used bike power. However: the grinder did not have sufficient capacity the collection unit was insufficient the grinding mechanism often became clogged.
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Problem Statement Desired State An ideal breadfruit grinder needs to:
be sturdy and made from inexpensive materials use human power as opposed to electricity/fuel use minimal water for cleaning be able to be transported by truck be composed of food safe materials produce consistent flour grain size output operate for at least 5 years without replacement parts
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Stakeholders Farmers in Borgne, Haiti Consumers of breadfruit flour
End users, will use it to make profit Consumers of breadfruit flour Need a quality product Sarah Brownell Customer, has worked with associated cooperative Fondation Dauphin Customer, supporting cooperative
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Use Scenario
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Customer Requirements
Resources for identifying requirements PRP - team P15482’s requirements Problem statement breakdown Customer interview responses Current shredder prototype Past grinder attempts and inadequacies
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Customer Requirements
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Benchmarking Compatible Technology International (CTI) breadfruit processing tools “emerging technology” - unclear if it is commercially available yet Not many technical specs listed 5 kg/hr production rate Mesh size information CTI has other manual grinders
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Benchmarking “Pedal Operated Flour Mill”
Department of Mechanical Engineering Yashavantrao College of Engineering, India Again, this was a report, not commercially available. Reported ideal operating speed relating to Watts of power required from user
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Engineering Requirements
Resources for determining requirements Customer Requirements Customer Interview Responses PRP - Team P15482’s Engineering Requirements Spoke with Sam Huselstein Adjusted accordingly Benchmarking and Research
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Engineering Requirements
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House of Quality
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House of Quality
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Draft Risk Assessment The following could risk successful outcomes of our goals and deliverables: Finding a reliable supply of breadfruit Being unable to reuse past prototypes’ grinding mechanism(s) Going over budget by purchasing grinding mechanism Machining resources unavailable Prototype requires too much effort to operate and causes fatigue, or grind mechanism becomes jammed Grinder becomes clogged Shred sizes are too large to be ground and/or grinder does not produce consistent flour quality Pinch point occurs from use of crank Injury occurs from exposed sharp parts / grind mechanism is not enclosed Bike power is demeaning to users Grind mechanism is not food safe and flour is contaminated Process results in a significant amount of breadfruit waste
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Draft Risk Assessment
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Project Plan Draft
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Project Plan Draft
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Next Steps Three Week Plan Finish breadfruit research
How to obtain breadfruit out of season Determine effectiveness of previous iterations Michigan P15482 Grinding mechanisms Stainless steel vs. stone Durability Grain consistency Food safety information FDA guidelines
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