MEAM.Design - MEAM 101 - DISSECT


Team formation
(to be done in lab on Oct 17th)

You are going to working with two or three other people from your lab section. Once you have found a group, place your names on the teams page (and please note your group number, as you will use this throughout the remainder of the project).


Project Organization Tips

This project is going to fine tune your SolidWorks skills, hopefully give you some insights into how others solve mechanical-design challenges, and it is definitely going to tax your organizational talents. Here are some tips to keep things moving along smoothly:

  • use PDM
  • establish a part/file naming convention including a UNIQUE identifier, and stick to it
  • think in terms of subassemblies
  • establish a mating convention
  • consider the creation of a google docs spreadsheet to track the parts of your object (number, filename, mating parts, subassembly, who's responsible, etc.)
  • when you begin dissection, do so in a careful and controlled manner, and it is highly recommended that you photograph and label parts as you go


Individual Renderings
(due by noon on Tuesday, October 22nd)

By now, everyone in your group should have modeled at least one interesting part. Each of you must now create a high-quality (1600x900 JPG, "best" quality) PhotoView rendering of the most interesting part (or subassembly) that you have created. Name the file as 101-DISSECT-RENDER-X-PennKey-S#(s1,s2,s3,s4 section).JPG (where X is your team letter and PennKey corresponds to the part of your email address before the @ sign), and upload it to the Canvas assignment.


Assembly Submission
(due by the start of lab on November 7th)

We will extract your full assembly from your team's PDM folder, so you need to make sure that it is all there before the deadline.


Exploded View or Animation
(due by 1:00 p.m. on Tuesday, November 12th)

You can either:

a) Create a beautiful 11x17-inch exploded-view poster of your dissected object

or

b) Create an explosion animation video of your dissected object.



(image credit: http://madspeitersen.deviantart.com/)