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ME3004D Design of Machine Elements: Text Book

This document provides an overview of the machine elements design course ME3004D. It lists the primary textbook and references used. It then discusses key aspects of the design process including definitions, representations of machines, identifying needs, feasibility analysis, preliminary and final design alternatives, drawings, manufacturing considerations, and the role of computers in design. The overall goal of the course is to teach students the process of designing new or improved machines.

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Neya Sebastian
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
670 views22 pages

ME3004D Design of Machine Elements: Text Book

This document provides an overview of the machine elements design course ME3004D. It lists the primary textbook and references used. It then discusses key aspects of the design process including definitions, representations of machines, identifying needs, feasibility analysis, preliminary and final design alternatives, drawings, manufacturing considerations, and the role of computers in design. The overall goal of the course is to teach students the process of designing new or improved machines.

Uploaded by

Neya Sebastian
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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ME3004D

Design of Machine Elements


Text Book:
Mechanical Engineering Design –
Joseph Edward Shigley
(McGraw Hill Book Company)

Dr. P.K. Rajendrakumar


Professor
Department of Mechanical Engineering
National Institute of Technology, Calicut
Other References
 J.E. Shigley and C.R. Mischke, Mechanical Engineering Design, Tata
McGraw Hill, Sixth Edn., 2003

 R.C. Juvinall and K.M. Marshek, Fundamentals of Machine Component


design, John Wiley & Sons

 R.L. Norton, Machine Design, Pearson Education

 M.J. Siegel, V.L. Maleev and J.B. Hartman, Mechanical Design of


Machines, International Textbook Company

 V.L. Doughtie and A.V. Vallance, Design of Machine elements,


McGraw Hill
 B.R. Narayana Iyengar and K. Lingaigh, Machine Design Data
Handbook, Vol. I & II

 P.S.G. Tech., Machine Design Data Hand Book


2
Definitions

 Engineering is the art and science by which the properties


of matter and the sources of power in nature are made
useful in structures, machines and fabricated parts

 A machine is a combination of resistant parts so arranged


as to cause the forces of nature to produce definite work
with constrained motion

 To design is to formulate a plan for the satisfaction of a


human need

3
Representation of a machine
4
Some well-defined needs

 A machine has to be made which produces square and


hexagonal holes, on plates with a maximum thickness of
20mm, with a reasonably good finish and accuracy

 This gear shaft is troublesome; within two weeks there


has been six failures. Do something with the system so
that frequent failures are avoided

 The final goal is known


 A plan has to be formulated to achieve this

5
Needs which are not well-identified

 Road accidents are too many, nowadays. It is required to


avoid them.

 Use of petroleum products are getting so increased that all


the oil wells are likely to be exhausted within a few years.
Devise a way to solve this problem.

 The need itself is not well-defined


 Difficult to formulate the real problem
 Difficult to formulate a feasible plan to solve it

6
Designs…. Classifications

 Building Design
 Highway Design
 Ship Design
 Process Design
 Clothing Design
 Machine design

......... to an endless number

7
Everyone does design exercises in one
way or other
Examples:
 Problem of organising an arts festival in the Institute
 Plan the events, time and structure of the festival such that
every student feels that he/she enjoyed the events well and
the deserving participants have won the titles

 Design of a family vacation


 Plan the vacation such that every family member should feel
that he or she had a good time

8
Design as a Process

 Design has an authentic purpose


 The creation of an end result by taking definite action or the
creation of something having physical reality

 Engineering Design is the process in which scientific


principles and the tools of engineering (Mathematics,
Computers, Graphics, English) are used to produce a plan
which, when carried out, will satisfy a human need

9
Machine Design

 The art and technique of planning the construction of new or


improved machines
 A new machine may be:
 entirely new in concept performing new types of work (as, an
invention)
 performing more efficiently and economically, work that can be
done by existing machines
 Incorporating some new inventions and some improvements of
existing machines
 Design is characterized by continual change of theory and
practice
 Knowledge of what has gone before, is important
10
The essence of machine design is the knowledge of :

 Kinematics
 Load
 Stress and deformation
analysis
 Behavior of materials
 Material fabrication

Evolution of design –
A creative blend of theory and experience
11
on materials and fabricating processes
Nature of Design Process

 Not a rigid or fixed series of steps which can be


prescribed

 Approach varies with individual requirements


 Industrial practices in a given field
 Size of the project
 Company practices
 Individual training

 Still, a logical sequence of steps, common to all


design projects, does exist
12
Design Process 13
Need

 A design is always generated by a need

 Need is either to satisfy a new requirement or to improve


the method of performing an existing task

 Need is motivated economically, politically, socially or a


combination of these factors

14
Defining the Problem
 The nature and scope of the requirements are translated to
physical terms
 The machine is defined in terms of
 its inputs and outputs
 shape, weight and size requirements
 environmental conditions
 noise level
……….and other limiting conditions

 Specifications should be as accurate as possible

 Requirements that go beyond what is necessary to satisfy the


need, increase costs and create unnecessary design problems
15
Feasibility
 Very often, economic or technological requirements may
be too rigid to permit feasible design

 Technological feasibility mainly depends on


 Materials technology
 Space limitations

 Prime importance is generally given to the economic


feasibility
 Cost of production
 Cost of operation
 Cost of maintenance 16
Preliminary Design Alternatives
 This is the System Design Phase

 Considers the best possible methods and kinematic paths


by which the machine input may be converted to machine
output in accordance with the specifications
 It is possible to have different systems which are kinematically
equivalent

 Uses theoretical links having idealized properties


 Rigid links (do not change shape)
 Pins do not wear and have no diameter
 Hydraulic links that are incompressible
 Pneumatic links which obey perfect gas laws
 Friction losses and the generated heat are not considered
17
Final design alternatives
 Mechanical Design Phase
 Considers
 Materials properties
 Deformation characteristics
 Load analysis (internal & external)
 Stress analysis
 Wear analysis
 Size of the members and inertia effects
 In the absence of insufficient information, assumptions are
made, which should be on the safe side in any case
 Feasibility is also studied on the basis of the above
considerations
18
Final Design selection

 There’ll be several final designs satisfying the original


specifications (machines that’ll do the job for the minimum
prescribed time)
 Selection of one of them is an Engineering Management
Problem
 Cost
 Aesthetics
 Salability
 Manufacturing facilities available
 Compatibility with existing equipment

19
Preliminary and final plans and drawings

 Drawings are the most economical and simplest means of


communicating ideas and information
 Indicate interferences
 Visualize shapes
 Aid in designing lubricating systems
 Show the problems of assembly and disassembly
 Point out possible maintenance difficulties

 Sometimes prototypes also are to be constructed before


production
 Even a minor error can be costly when large number of units are to
be produced

20
Manufacturing
 Design and manufacturing go hand in hand
 Design for manufacturability (DFM) is a well-established
and needed tool for design engineers
 A brilliant concept that cannot be manufactured cannot be a design
 Decisions made early in the design process can reduce the
manufacturing costs considerably

 Design for assembly (DFA) is another consideration


 Individual components should be easily fabricated, assembled and
21
constructed
Computers in Design
 Computers are useful in virtually integrating all phases of the
design process
 Computer Aided Design (CAD) allows the design engineer to
visualize geometries without making costly models, iterations or
prototypes
 Designs can be optimized and modified directly and easily at any time
 Information stored by the computer can be accessed and retrieved from
anywhere within the organization
 Expert systems are rule-based computer programs that solve
specialized problems on an expert level
 Provide problem-solving skills to the design engineer
 Eg: An expert system could analyze a part drafted on a computer system for
ease of manufacturing. If an excessively tight tolerance is found, the expert
system warns of manufacturing difficulties and suggests easing the tolerance.
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