drawoh
Mechanical
- Oct 1, 2002
- 8,959
The cover story in what I assume to be the October 10 issue of Design News has an article on something called "functional build". The concept is that instead of thoroughly inspecting each fabricated part, Japanese manufacturers focus on system quality. This is explains at least part of why they design better quality cars. Someone presumably is racking up consultant fees on this, and I guess I wasted my youth. 
The article probably is up somewhere on It is not very clear on what the Japanese actually do. It sounds like they design their assemblies to allow for sloppier tolerances.
In fact, it all sounds like good versus bad drafting practise. You can specify tolerances on your parts and do stackup analysis all you want, but it is a waste of time if you are too accurate for your manufacturers. Perhaps Japanese engineers talk to fabricators?
Comments?
JHG
The article probably is up somewhere on It is not very clear on what the Japanese actually do. It sounds like they design their assemblies to allow for sloppier tolerances.
In fact, it all sounds like good versus bad drafting practise. You can specify tolerances on your parts and do stackup analysis all you want, but it is a waste of time if you are too accurate for your manufacturers. Perhaps Japanese engineers talk to fabricators?
Comments?
JHG