Project One: Reverse Engineering

Introduction

The first project for the course will introduce you to the initial stages of reverse engineering. It is important for an engineer to develop the ability to observe existing products/systems and determine how they function and why they were designed they way they were. Most, if not all, new ideas are generated after observing and experiencing existing engineering solutions [1].

The learning objectives for the student are to develop the ability to:

[1]"If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants." -- Isaac Newton https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standing_on_the_shoulders_of_giants

Instructions

The first task is to maintain a notebook of designs that you observe in your everyday life over the first two weeks of the quarter. You should purchase a notebook with blank line-less pages so that you can take notes and generate sketches of the products and systems you observe. Carry the notebook with you at all times, observe as many designs as possible in any domain (i.e., mechanical, architectural, electrical, interior, fashion, pop-culture, etc.) using an engineer's "eye", and keep a log in the notebook concerning your observations. Of all the designs you observe, you'll ultimately need to detail two favorite designs in your notebook and finalize one of those in a formal written report. Both of which will be peer reviewed by your teammates and then graded by the instructors. Your design notebook must be submitted with the final written report.

Possible Observable Objects

Any human-made item that you encounter can qualify, here are some examples:

Don't let this list limit you, there are endless possibilities.

Timeline

Friday September 25
The project will be introduced in class during the discussion section with a kickoff group activity to get everyone started.
Friday October 2
Each student will bring their notebook to class with at least 50 different designs that have been observed and noted. Number your designs. The instructors will take a grade for your notebook in class.
Friday October 9
Continue to collect designs, but during the previous week you should choose 5 designs that are you favorite and flesh out the details of the designs in your notebook with more notes, calculations, sketches, etc. During class you will present your top two designs to your group in a "lighting talk", i.e. 2 minutes per design with 2 minutes group feedback per design. We will check for the five detailed designs in class. Number your designs.
Friday October 16
During the previous week you should choose your top design to detail in your report. First drafts will be due at the beginning of class. To "turn in" the draft you need to share it via Google drive with both instructors and your group members. The draft must be shared before the beginning of class on Friday. We will give an introduction to peer review process during class.
Wednesday October 21
Each team member should peer review each other team member's report before class. Each team member must provide at least two positive and two negative comments on each teammates' paper and any additional comments must come in positive/negative pairs. Make sure to use the insert comment functionality and/or the "suggestions" editing mode so that the author of the paper can choose whether to accept your advice or not. See the shared Google Doc for more tips.
Friday October 23
After you've turned in your draft you should work to refine your report based off of you peer's feedback. The final report is due by beginning of class this day.

Design Notebook

To execute this project you should purchase and use a design notebook. A bookstore or an art supply store will have several types of bound books of 8.5 x 11 inch blank white paper. It is best not to have lines or grids because they constrain your thinking so get blank pages. [2]

In your notebook, you will make notes and sketches that help you document and design changes for a particular system. Consider the notebook as your own personal space, in which you work and think. Use any combination of words and pictures to help you flesh out ideas. Try to use a mix of quantity and quality, sometimes go for sheer numbers of ideas and other times try to draw a nice sketch or do a calculation. If you do work on computer or take photographs paste these into you notebook. Try to carry your notebook with you all the time, you never know when an idea or thought will reveal itself.

Be sure to use any relevant engineering knowledge you have gained in previous courses and this course to enhance your design understanding.

[2]You may use an electronic notebook (e.g. tablet) if you can easily include sketches and share the resulting documents to be graded by your instructors. The final output to be turned in with the report should be a PDF.

Things to address

In your notebook and final report you likely want to address questions such as these. You are not required to cover all of these questions nor should these limit you.

Report

The goal of the report is to explain the design you studied by giving the reader an idea of how it functions and why it was designed the way it was.

The main content items we are looking for are:

You will be graded on:

The report for this project must be created using Google Docs. It must include these pages:

Title Page

This page should include title, author, student id, date, and course number and an abstract. The abstract should be a very short summary of the project. One paragraph should be plenty.

Content Pages (three pages)

  • Introduction: Introduce the design and what you are you want us to learn about it.
  • Detailed explanations and descriptions: Text, figures, tables, equations, etc that explain the design and address some, more or all of the issues listed above.
  • Conclusion: Summary of what you learned and maybe things you'd still like to learn about the design.

We strongly encourage you to use visual communication liberally in the report. Reports should contain a significant amount of visual information such as sketches, drawings, word maps, etc.

Reference Page

Cite sources for any information that you didn't generate yourself.

Appendix

You may include an optional appendix with extra details, but you will only be graded on the above pages. The appendix could include more details of a calculation or a more detailed drawing/sketch.

Formatting

  • The Google Doc file name should follow this format: EME150A-PROJ01-LASTNAME-FIRSTNAME, for example: EME150A-PROJ01-MOORE-JASON.
  • 11 pt Arial font (default)
  • Default margins
  • Equations and variables must be created with "Insert > Equation" or "Insert > Special Characters".
  • Figures should have captions. See this blog post for a method of adding captions with Google Docs.
  • Use whatever citation style you prefer.

Peer Review

You will be responsible for peer reviewing you teammates' work. Each team member will draft their report using Google Docs. Once the draft is complete you will need to share the document with your teammates and the two instructors. You are then responsible for reading and critiquing your team members' reports with the goal of helping them improve the work. You must provide two positive and two negative pieces of feedback via the "Insert > Comment" or "Suggesting" feature in Google Docs. This feedback cannot be the same as other teammates. Do not edit their paper directly! This allows the author to decided which comments they want to include or dismiss. If you want to add more feedback it must come in pairs: positive and negative.

Things to think about:

Tips:

Grading

Added October 4, 2015

The grade for Project 1 will be broken down as follows:

50 Designs 10%
5 Detailed Designs 10%
Report Draft 10%
Draft Peer Review 10%
Final Report 60%