Selection
When the technical analysis indicates that you have some potentially viable designs, the best one available must be selected for detailed design, prototyping, and testing. The selection process usually involves a comparative analysis of the available design solu- tions. A decision matrix sometimes helps to identify the best solution by forcing you to consider a variety of factors in a systematic way. A decision matrix for our better grass shortener is shown in Figure 1-2. Each design occupies a row in the matrix. The col- umns are assigned categories in which the designs are to be judged, such as cost, ease of use, efficiency, performance, reliability, and any others you deem appropriate to the par- ticular problem. Each category is then assigned a weighting factor, which measures its relative importance. For example, reliability may be a more important criterion to the user than cost, or vice versa. You as the design engineer have to exercise your judgment as to the selection and weighting of these categories. The body of the matrix is then filled with numbers which rank each design on a convenient scale, such as 1 to 10, in each of the categories. Note that this is ultimately a subjective ranking on your part. You must examine the designs and decide on a score for each. The scores are then multiplied by the weighting factors (which are usually chosen so as to sum to a convenient number such as 1) and the products summed for each design. The weighted scores then give a ranking of designs. Be cautious in applying these results. Remember the source and sub- jectivity of your scores and the weighting factors! There is a temptation to put more faith in these results than is justified. After all, they look impressive! They can even be taken out to several decimal places! (But they shouldn't be.) The real value of a decision
matrix is that it breaks the problem into more tractable pieces and forces you to think about the relative value of each design in many categories. You can then make a more informed decision as to the "best" design.
Detailed Design
This step usually includes the creation of a complete set of assembly and detail drawings or computer-aided design (CAD) part files, for each and every part used in the design. Each detail drawing must specify all the dimensions and the material specifications nec- essary to make that part. From these drawings (or CAD files) a prototype test model (or models) must be constructed for physical testing. Most likely the tests will discover more flaws, requiring further iteration.
Prototyping and Testing
MODELS Ultimately, one cannot be sure of the correctness or viability of any design until it is built and tested. This usually involves the construction of a prototype physical model. A mathematical model, while very useful, can never be as complete and accu- rate a representation of the actual physical system as a physical model, due to the need to make simplifying assumptions.