Window blinds
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Contents |
Executive Summary
Major Stakeholders
Customer – Customers include those individuals or parties who actually purchase the blinds to fulfill a purpose. What they might be looking for in a set of blinds can vary from style and color to functionality and efficiency. Should there be any problems with the original set of blinds, parts should be easily replaceable. For consumers, it is all about an attractive, low-cost, and easy-to-maintain product.
User – Users in most cases will not be limited to the customer. Depending on where the blinds are installed, there could be 1 user or 1,000 users. A user will expect the blinds to be effective, sturdy and durable, and easy to use and clean.
Installer – The installer could be the customer, but in some cases could also be a professional who is familiar with home product installations. Of utmost importance in this case will be the compatibility of the blinds with standard tools and the minimization of steps for assembly.
Retailer – The retailer will be the first major post-production stop for a new set of blinds. For retailers, it is necessary that blinds not only cater to consumer needs, but do so in a way that gives retailers an incentive to sell them. Specifically, there should be sufficient variety in size, color, etc. to capture the needs of most customers, the blinds should fit into packaging that is easy to handle, store and ship, and the wholesale cost should be low enough that the retailer can make a profit.
Product Use
Assembly and Bill of Materials
DFMA
The blinds that we dissected were cheaply purchased and because of this we know that they are massed produced. The assembly is relatively complicated with many interdependent working parts. After examining the manufacturing techniques used to produce the blinds we feel that the efficiency has been maximized. Most parts have been produced so that they can be used interchangeably, for example left and right parts do not matter. We saw that unnecessary material was removed from certain parts to reduce material usage and to make installation easier. We found that many parts snap together to make manufacturing time minimal and the same parts could be used for larger or smaller blinds. Minimal tools are required to manufacture and assemble these parts. Because these are inexpensive blinds that design was kept simple and fulfills its most basic purposes. The blinds use a lot of plastic parts and most of the plastic is the same. None of the parts manufactured seem to require tight tolerances.
Design for manufacturing guidelines
Minimize Part Count: Eliminate fasteners, part consolidation - only 3 rivets - wall mounts are interchangeable for left and right sides
Standardize Components: Take advantage of economies of scale & known component properties - wall mount had a lot of holes, reduced material, easy to install - many components come in pairs
Communize Product Line: Economies of scale and minimum training and equipment - parts snap together - larger blinds use similar parts
Standardize Design: Common dimensions for fewer tools and setups - only need rivet gun, bending machine
Keep Designs Simple: Simplest way to achieve needed functionality - easy access to screws
Multifunctional Parts: - wall mount can be left on right, many parts are interchangeable - lock house pin also supports lock gear
Ease of Fabrication: Choose materials easy to work with - product uses the same plastic material for many parts
Avoid Tight Tolerances: Causes exponential cost increases - no parts are machined
Take advantage of Special Process Properties: - wall mount, reduction of material
FMEA
DFE
Team Member Roles
Min-Qiang Chan-Manufacturing and Assembly
Laura Gurwitz-Team Leader
Kory McDonald-Safety
Francisco Santiago-Environment