I found the article entitled, "Filing system for engineers.” It was not in Machine Design magazine. It was in Power Transmission magazine which is now PTE, Power Transmission Engineering. At least I am guessing that PT became PTE.
At the bottom of pages 126 through 130 in the article it reads, “126/POWER TRANSMISSION-82,” etc. I guess that was 1982 and only one issue printed per year?
I subscribed to PTE online and asked them permission to e-scan and post on eng-tips.com forum from my original copy of the article cut from the mag.
PHovnanian, I appreciate your comments and hope to key into some more modern techniques but for now I just really liked the simplicity of this filing system which can be set up to each individual or company needs.
PHovnanian,BTW -- I have signed up for an intemediate/advanced Ms Excel class for March 2012(took a basic course ten years ago)and I am thinking to use Excel to start a filing system. I have generated two Excel workbooks so far for the project. One is for competitor specs with a composite section for min/max/median/avg numbers and the other is Customer vs. Horsepower requirements based on specific industry formulae.
I re-read your comments which are very germane to my situation because I am in the last stage of gathering competitor spec’s and researching of a difficult engineering application procedure. Friday we had our first meeting with top mgmt. to plan for the initial equipment of a new product line I will be designing. It is an opportune time to implement something of the order you are suggesting but I am clueless where to start because for me your suggestions are a little too generic. However you have hit my nail on the head with this statement:
Issues around tracing customer and regulatory requirements, through engineering analysis to product definition start to become significant.
Because each point you covered applies to this project including Fed rqmts.
This is the part that is too generic for me so that I am not sure where to start:
The best place to start is to look at various uses cases in…
This thread really belongs in the following Forum -- sorry to misspost it here.
Overcoming Obstacles Getting My Work Done
Design for RELIABILITY, manufacturability, and maintainability