Assessing the Complexity of a Recovered Design and its Potential Redesign Alternatives
Date published
2009-03-31
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Publisher
Cranfield University Press
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Type
Conference paper
ISSN
Format
Citation
R. J. Urbanic, W. H. ElMaraghy, Assessing the Complexity of a Recovered Design and its Potential Redesign Alternatives, Proceedings of the 19th CIRP Design Conference – Competitive Design, Cranfield University, 30-31 March 2009, pp202
Abstract
Reverse engineering techniques are applied to generate a part model where there is no existing documentation or it is no longer up to date. To facilitate the reverse engineering tasks, a modular, multiperspective design recovery framework has been developed. An evaluation of the product and feature complexity characteristics can readily be extracted from the design recovery framework by using a modification of a rapid complexity assessment tool. The results from this tool provide insight with respect to the original design and assists with the evaluation of potential alternatives and risks, as illustrated by the case study.
Description
Organised by: Cranfield University
Software Description
Software Language
Github
Keywords
Product Complexity, Design Recovery, Redesign
DOI
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Copyright: Cranfield University 2009
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Funder/s
Mori Seiki – The Machine Tool Company