Beginner module

Intro to Design and Manufacturing

Move from need statements to requirements, concepts, trade studies, prototypes, tests, and manufacturable decisions.

Course outline only for now. Full chapter-level lessons are still in progress. Use this page for readiness, concepts, worked-example format, practice, review, and portfolio direction. Complete course contents are live today for Math, Physics, and Statics.

01

Readiness check

Before starting, confirm the prerequisite habits.

  • Separate needs from solutions.
  • Write measurable quantities.
  • Read simple drawings.
  • Understand basic manufacturing constraints.
0 or 1 weak itemContinue, but slow down at the worked example.
2 weak itemsReview the foundation page linked in the roadmap before solving practice problems.
3 or more weak itemsStep back to prerequisites; this module depends on them.
02

The core idea

Turn a vague problem into requirements, concepts, tests, and a decision record.

Design starts by translating a fuzzy need into measurable metrics and a test (must be light becomes under 200 g, verified on a scale) because you cannot iterate toward a target you cannot measure.

need to metric to test
Works when: each requirement is a measurable metric with a test, and concepts are compared against those metrics.
Breaks down when: you converge on one concept early on taste, before the requirements are measurable or the alternatives compared.
Figure 1. Concept model for Intro to Design and Manufacturing. The figure names inputs, computed variables, geometry, and result.
input/load result/constraint computed variable dimension/model geometry
03

The method

1Model

Make the physical situation visible.

2Relate

Translate the model into symbols.

3Solve

Calculate only after the model is clear.

4Check

Use units, scale, and limiting cases.

04

Worked example

Figure 2. Worked problem setup: A student team needs a desk clamp for a small test rig. Translate the need into three measurable requirements and one first protot
Figure 3. Calculation model. The result follows from the model, units, and reasonableness check.

A student team needs a desk clamp for a small test rig. Translate the need into three measurable requirements and one first prototype test.

  1. Problem A student team needs a desk clamp for a small test rig. Translate the need into three measurable requirements and one first prototype test.
  2. Given and find Must hold 300 N, fit a 20 to 45 mm desk edge, be removable without damage. Find: Requirements and a test plan.
  3. Assumptions Idealized model, consistent units, and no hidden effects outside the stated scope.
  4. Step Write one load requirement, one geometry requirement, and one user requirement.
  5. Step Example: no slip at 300 N for 60 s on a 25 mm desk edge.
  6. Step Prototype the jaw and screw contact before styling the final body.
  7. Step Check that every requirement can be measured.
  8. Conclusion 3 requirements + 1 test. Carry this result into the design decision, not just into the answer box.
05

Misconceptions and diagnostics

MistakeSymptomDiagnostic questionCorrection
Vague requirementsMust be strong, with no numberHow would you test this requirement?Turn each need into a metric with a target and a test.
Premature convergenceCommits to the first conceptDid you generate and compare alternatives?Hold several concepts to a decision matrix.
No verification planBuilds before defining successWhat test proves it works?Define the acceptance test before building.
06

Practice ladder

Level 1: direct skill

Redo the worked example with one changed input. Predict the trend before calculating.

Check yourself

The trend must match the governing relation: need to metric to test.

Level 2: mixed concept

Draw the model from memory, label knowns and unknowns, then write the first equation without looking.

Check yourself

Your first equation should connect the model to test evidence.

Level 3: independent problem

Create a similar problem from a real object near you. State assumptions, solve it, and include a reasonableness check.

Check yourself

A valid solution has a sketch, given/find list, governing relation, units, and a conclusion.

Level 4: transfer task

Turn the result into a design decision: what would you change if the output missed its target by 25 percent?

Check yourself

Name the design variable with the strongest influence and justify it from the equation.

07

Working with AI, and proving it yourself

Useful AI role

Ask for a critique of assumptions, units, diagram labels, and missing checks after you have attempted the solution.

Do not outsource

Do not paste the problem and accept a final answer. Your evidence is the model, the checks, and the explanation.

08

Retrieval and spaced review

Closed-notes prompts: state a need, translate it into three measurable metrics, define a test for each, and name how you would compare two concepts against them.

TodayRedo the worked example from a blank page.
+1 daySolve Level 1 without notes.
+3 daysSolve Level 2 with changed numbers.
+7 daysConnect this module to another course.
+30 daysAdd a portfolio artifact.
09

Mapping and portfolio task

Course mapping

Intro to design is the framing course: it gives the need-to-metric-to-test discipline that capstone, machine elements, and manufacturing all execute against.

First-pass focus: definitions, model setup, units, and worked examples. Save edge cases for the second pass.

Portfolio task

Create a one-page design brief turning a need into measurable metrics and a test: sketch, assumptions, equations, result, reasonableness check, limitation, and recommendation.