The study of human body properties (height, mass, volume, etc.)
What is Anthropometrics?
A model which resource remains in use for as long as possible.
What is circular economy?
To outline principles and basic functions.
What is the purpose of conceptual modelling?
Tensile & Compressive Strength, Stiffness, Toughness, Ductility, Elasticity, Plasticity, Stress & Strain
What are the mechanical properties of material?
The creation of new devices/objects, ideas useful for human objectives. Must also be successfully commercialised.
What is the definition of an innovation?
Functional data of subject during movement.
Natural and replenish able through time vs. finite and cannot self-replenish sufficiently
What is the difference between renewable and non-renewable resources?
Allows clients/users to have an input in developing the mode.
What is the pro/advantage of conceptual modelling?
Softwood, Hardwood, MDF, Plywood, Chipboard/Particleboard
What are the different types of timber?
Copyright, Trademark, Patent/Patent Pending
What are the different types of legal ownership to intellectual property (IP)?
What is the different between primary and secondary data?
Dematerialised Design, Low Impact Materials, Cleaner Products, Disassembly Design, Longevity Design
A sample of the final product in full-scale and fully functional.
What is a prototype?
What is tempering?
Disruptive, Process, Architectural, Modular, Configurational
What are the different types of innovation?
Nominal Scale, Ordinal Scale, Interval Scale, Ratio Scale
What are the four different scales used in data collection?
Design that looks at resource (reduction & recyclability), human (substance management), and energy (energy efficiency enhancement) factors.
What is Green Design?
2D, 3D, Wireframe, Surface Modelling, Solid, Data, Virtual, Bottom Up, Top Down
What are the different types of CAD (Computer-Aided-Design)?
One-off, Batch, Mass, Continuous Flow, Mass Customization
What are the different scales of production?
Act of Insight, Adaptation, Analogy, Chance, Technology Transfer, Technology Push, Market Pull
What are the different strategies for innovation?
Mechanics of living organisms considering force, repetition, duration, and posture.
What is Biomechanics?
To eliminate waste by designing products that can be reused/refunctioned.
A method of 3D printing which uses liquid photopolymers and UV laser.
What is SLA (Stereolithography)?
High Pressure Die Casting. Often used to make metal toys.
What is one shaping technique?
1. Launch (Development --> Introduction)
2. Growth
3. Maturity
4. Decline
What are the stages in a product life cycle?