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19 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
breifly describe the design of the o-rings, and why they failed |
sections instead a single part tang and clevis compress and expand due to may factors including communication and managment launched on a cold day pressure cause oring to compress, did not expand in time deflagration The solid rocket booster was designed in sectionsinstead of a single parts because Norton thycol was located in Arizona, and theonly way they could ship the parts were in sections by train. These sectionswere placed together in a tang andclevis with two orings, one acting as the primary seal and the other as abackup seal. The rubber orings were mean to compress and decompress with thepressures caused by the hot gasses in the SRB. Unfourtunately, due to manyfactors including communication and management, Nasa decided to launch on avery cold day and the orings could not functioun properly under lowtemperatures. Pressure forced the orings to compress, but they could not retractin time which allowed hot gasses to escape through the joint and pierce intothe fuel tank leading to deflagration. |
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What was the political and social context of the decision to proceed with the space shuttle project? describe the effect these factors had on the difficulty of the project |
ppl not interested in space
war = low budget
promised cost efficitent, reusable, send regular people Increased scope, 45% cargo
space truck easy
pressured on time
NASAwas building the space shuttle at a time when people were not as interested inspace anymore. Furthermore, war was led to a reduced space budget. This madethe project much more difficult. Nasa was also increasing the scope of theproject to carry more weight into space and made the cargo bay 45% bigger. The shuttleprogram promised hope to the people to be cost efficient, reusable, and theidea of sending regular people to space like a teacher. They advertised it as aspace truck and tried to come across on how easy it was to operate. Otherfactors were decreased time to buld, increased pressure and less money to workwith. |
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what is all up testing? what are the trade offs that would need to be considered in making a decision to adopt such a testing methodology? |
all up- build the bitch then test bottom up- test everything along the way 7million parts, impossible to do bottoms up. ideal to come up w/ a combination of the two aproaches the higher the higher the complexity but the higher the reward All up testing is when the product is completelydesigned and built, then finally tested. Bottom up testing is when every partof the component is tested before the product can be put together and testedone last time. Although Bottom up testing is safer, it is not as practical asall up testing. Bottom up testing is very expensive and time consuming. Whendealing with a project such as the space shuttle, there is over 7 million partsthat consist of the shuttle. There is no way to individually test every part,that is why an all up approach was taken. It is ideal to come up with acombination of the two approaches to receive the maximum amount of testingwhile still being cost effective and meet deadlines. |
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discuss the adequacy of the data the engineers presented to their management when they reccommeded against the launch. discuss both the format and the context of the data |
Roger Boisjoly messy, hand written uneccesary information hard to understand incoclusive insufficient data to draw a conclusion should have made it more quantitative charts, graphs and regression lines once you lose your audience you lose your credibility The presentation given by Roger boisjoly was notgood enough. From what we saw in class the data presented was messy handwritten, filled with unessary information making it had to understand. The datawas inconclusive. There were only 2 data points on the slides, 22 othermissing. There was insufficient data to draw a conclusion. The information wasnot adequate. They needed to make it more quantitative with only necessaryinformation and a chart shown with a regression line so that it can be easilyunderstood by the audience. Once you loose your audience you loose yourcredibility.unX;) |
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what is the ethical lesson of the challenger? |
even when there is pressure, speak up
have right data to support theory
communication Management has deadlines
The ethical lesson that was learned was thatthere is pressure from management, and other sources, but you need to speak upwhen there is a major problem. There is also a need to have the right data tosupport your theory. Also, communication of the problem with the right peopleis important. When lives are involved it is important to stick to your ethics,even f it means going against management a risking your career. |
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what are value based decision? what are factors that need to be considered in making such a decision? |
knowledge data information experience make a vbd by understanding level of uncertanty make a decision where you can live with the consequences having to choose a material for a part what to do with inconclusive data A value based decisionis a decision that you make based on knowledge, data, information andexperience. Data may conflict with your decision, but an engineer must make avbd by understanding the level of uncertenty. It is to make a decision whereyou can live with the conswquences. And example of making a vbd is when havingto choose a material for a part or choosing what to do with inconclusive data.ۃXt[ |
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why is murphys law inevitable consequence of modern engineering design? |
project are always really complex
failure of one part can lead to failure of mult. systems Can't test errything
more complexity = more uncertanty
Murphys law states what can go wrong will go wrong. Murphys lawhappens in modern engineering because products are becoming more complex andfailure of a single part can cause the whole system to fail. With morecomplexity comes more uncertainty YXٜ |
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why can engineering data be uncertain? how do engineers deal with uncertain data? |
1) tested like gravity 2) empiriacly tested like strss vs strain 3)known missing knowledge like climate4)unkown missing knowledge- don’t know whatyou don’t know No datum stands alone, ask yourself is thedatat reliable. |
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discuss the uncertainties associated with testing. how does the engineer resolve these difficulties? |
Harder to prove something is reliable
40-90% happens due to fatigue light bulb in on for an hour
deals with this by making value based decisions
It easy to prove its unreliable, but who knows howlong it will be reliable. Therefore it is harder to prove something isreliable. For example you can turn on a light bulb for an hour and you cannotsay it will not burn out, but you can say it did not burn out for an hour. An engineerdeals with these problems by making a value based decision.one, X! |
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discuss the difficulties of complexity in design |
increasing complexity = increase uncertenty
always better to keep it simple Silent killer of engineering
Complexity is an increasing problem with design, byincreasing the complexity you increase the uncertainty. An example is the f35. Becausethe plane is designed to cater to multiple branches of the military thecomplexity of the aircraft is very high, therefore the uncertainty isincreased. There is also limited time, budget, and managemet pressure which iswhy it is a engineering failure. It is always best to keep it simple. X |
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Describe project issues |
STAR(scope, budget, safety, deadline, quality) Your project is likely very behind from the beginning All of these project determinants are interdependent When you have to make trade offs, the decisions do not havepredictable consequences. Mythical man month |
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what is material selection and use? |
Inclomplete knowledge of behavior of materials in the faceof extreme conditions such as temp or magnetic fields, friction or corrosion) We have to make decisions on what materials to choose No material is ideal, particularly when viewed across the fullproduct cycle. An example was the choice of the rubber they used for theo-rings and how they acted at extremely low temperatures they did not plan on operationin. |
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what is software problems? |
Potentially unreliable software May be to complexProgramed by humans, eith limited time and money to completeproject Data supplied to model could be unreliable Example is the complex coding found in the millions of linesof code for the f35 continues to be delayed. |
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what are human factors? |
Problems contributed by the user (when your custome doesstuipid stuff with your product) Problem caused by engineer such as the engineer thinking thecustomer can figure it out. |
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how can there be organizational and communication errors? |
Within the organization (nasa)
Within the system theselves- the system can be unorganized c -in organizations -within systems themselves -see challenger disaster for example |
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What are the types of uncertain data? |
Tested TestedEmpirically Empirically tested
Known missing
Unknown missing |
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What are the project issues? |
Scope Budget Reliability Safety Deadline |
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What is Newton Airport identifier |
KEWK |
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What is the elevation at KEWK? |
1530 ft |