CHAPTER1 - Introduction to Engg design
Sabarish, Madan, Khaleel, Sai Krishna, Ronan
1. Product architecture is the assignment of the ___________ elements of a product
to _____________ building blocks of the product
a) functional; conceptual
b) functional; physical
c) non-functional; conceptual
d) non-functional; physical
2. One of the two properties of a modular architecture is that:
a) The functional elements of the product are implemented using more than
one chunk
b) A single chunk implements many functional elements.
c) The interactions between chunks are well-defined and are generally
fundamental to the primary functions of the product
d) The interactions between chunks are not at all well-defined.
3. One of two the properties of a modular architecture is that:
a) The functional elements of the product are implemented using more than
one chunk
b) The interactions between chunks are not at all well-defined.
c) Chunks implement one or a few functional elements in their entirety.
d) Functional elements of the product are implemented using more than one
chunk
4. An integral architecture exhibits certain properties, such as:
a) The interactions between chunks are well defined and are generally
fundamental to the primary functions of the product
b) Chunks implement one or a few functional elements in their entirety.
c) A single chunk implements many functional elements.
d) None of the above
5. The following is an example of a product with modular architecture:
a) Compact Camera
b) Sony Walkman
c) High Performance Wheels
d) BMW S1000RR Motorcycle
The following is an example of a product with integral architecture:
a) Swiss-Army Knife
b) Sony Walkman
c) Compact camera
d) Swatch
6.
7. Which of the following is an Engineering Design characteristic?
a) Trans-disciplinary
b) Iterative
c) Neither a nor b
d) Both a and b
8. What is the personal characteristic of an Engineering Designer?
a) Ability to identify problems
b) Supervisory skills
c) Both a and b
d) Only a
9. Which of the following is an Engineering design model?
a) Pahl and Beitz
b) Friedman and Stig
c) Resnick and Hathway
d) Hall and Carrieck model
10.What is the 3rd stage of Pugh model?
A. Market
B. Detail Design
C. Concept Design
D. Sell
11.Which of the following are internal Engineering Design Interfaces?
a) Computation and purchasing
b) Manufacturing and commissioning
c) Computation and drawing office
d) Manufacturing and development
CHAPTER1 - Introduction to Engg design
Q1) Main characteristics of Engineering Design are:
A) Trans disciplinary
B) Highly Complex
C) Iterative
D) All
Q2) An Engineering Designer must be capable of dealing with:
A) The production of practical design solutions
B) The production of design requirement of a particular component, system,
assembly or installation
C) Negotiations with vendors on aspects of bought out components
D) All
Q3) The aim of the engineering design process is to support the designer
by providing a _________
A) Framework
B) Methodology
C) Either
D) None
Q4) Engineering design is a ___________ process
A) sequential
B) iterative
C) both
D) either of (A) or (B)
CHAPTER 2 – PDS
Manoj Deshpande and Group
Q1) The factor which doesn’t determine the quality of the product is:
a) Consistency of components of products
b) Products should meet the requirements
c) All components should be new and free from defects
d) Weight of product should be less
Q2) Colour shape form and texture come under, which criteria?
(a) Acceptance standards
(b) Operational requirements
(c) Performance requirements
(d) Manufacture requirements
Q3) Which are the criteria of pds?
(a) Manufacture
(b) Performance
(c) Interference
(d) Operation
Q4) Which is not a part of disposal?
(a) Standards
(b) Safety
(c) Legislations
(d) Company policy
Q5) Method of verification of products speed, consumption and
reliability is called
(a) Inspection
(b) Quality
(c) Patents
(d) Testing
CHAPTER 2 - PDS
Giri Ganesh and group
Q1) Body of pds consists of
a) Performance requirements
b) Manufacture requirements
c) Acceptance standards
d) all of these
Q2) Which of them is not a performance requirement?
a) Function
b) Aesthetics
c) Reliability
d) Processes
Q3) Which of them is an operational requirement?
A) disposal
b) Assembly
c) Maintenance
d) Noise
Q4) The scope in the content of PDS consists of
Inclusions
Exclusions
Range
All of above
Q5) Which of these is not the content of PDS?
a) References
b) Representation
c) Content list
d) Definitions
CHAPTER 2 - PDS
Q1) Which of the following is not a manufacturing requirement?
A) Materials
B) Assembly
C) Delivery date
D) Standards
CHAPTER 3 - Creativity
Q1) ________________ is mainly used to challenge all assumptions and to try
to restructure any pattern
A) Vertical thinking
B) Lateral thinking
C) Psychological set
D) Brainstorming
Q2) ___________ is a deliberate method for breaking out of ‘set’ thinking
which involves viewing a problem from a different angle or stand point
A)
Q3) __________ technique, basic principle used is association of ideas:
A) Morphological analysis
B) Brainstorming
C) Inversion
D) Analogy
Q4) The opportunity for making changes or suggesting improvements to the concepts is
________ before detail design
A) low
B) high
C) medium
D) average
CHAPTER 4 - Concept Selection
Coca Sai Prajeeth, Ameen, Abhinav, Aamir, Jitendra
Q1) Which of the following does not apply to the datum method?
A) + or – assigned relative to first datum.
B) Criteria are taken on the vertical axis.
C) Concepts are taken on the horizontal axis.
D) + or – assigned relative to each other
Q2) During criteria ranking and weighing procedure which of the
following doesn’t happen.
A) Criteria are reordered according to descending order of weight.
B) Criteria are reordered according to ascending order of weight.
C) Criteria reordered in no particular order.
D) Total number of 1s is 0.5(n^2-n)
Q3) Which of the following is not a principle of concept selection?
A) Divergence
B) Convergence
C) Intuition
D) Visibility
Q4) Correct formula for the number of 0’s in a BDM is:
A) 0.5n(n-1)
B) n-0.5n(n-1)
C) n^2 – 0.5n(n-1)
D) 0.5n(n+1)
Q5) Computer aided decision making is not one of the following:
A) It is a spread sheet program
B) It helps in accelerating selection procedure
C) Changes can be made easily
D) It is a word program
CHAPTER 4 - Concept Selection
Ajeeth and group
Q1) The concept selection stage in engineering design process is
A) Divergent
B) Convergent
C) Both a & b
D) None of the above
Q2) The EVAD method of concept selection was developed at
A) University of Twente
B) University of Twenty
C) University of Toronto
D) University of Tweety
Q3) The Harris method is to present the designer with a
A) Visual representation of decision to be made
B) Quality assessment of alternating products
C) Both a & b
D) None of the above
Q4) The total number of 1s in criteria ranking matrix must be equal to
A) 0.5n (n-2)
B) 0.5n (2n-1)
C) 0.5n (n-1)
D) 0.5n (2n-2)
Q5) In EVAD method the results are entered on diagram giving an
evaluation profile for each idea. The profiles are compared in a
A) Qualitative
B) Quantitative
C) Both a & b
D) None of the above
CHAPTER 4 - Concept Selection
Q1) Concept generation is a ___________ process
A) convergent
B) divergent
C) continuous
D) iterative
Q2) _________ matrix is used in criteria ranking
A) Square
B) Column
C) Binary Dominance
D) Transpose
Q3) Datum method is based on what?
A) concept on one axis
B) criteria on one axis
C) both (A) and (B)
D) none of these
Q4) Which of the following is not a formal decision making process used
by engineer designer?
A) Time wasted in pursuing wrong alternatives to the detail design stage
is avoided
B) Causing decision making to be visible
C) The ability to evaluate the thought processes of others is developed
D) None of these
CHAPTER 5 – EMBODIMENT
Q1) Embodiment is the bridge between concept stage and _______
A. Specification stage
B. Detail design
C. Manufacture
D. None of the above
Q2) The input to embodiment is the conceptual design sketches
developed earlier and __________
A. PDS
B. Form design
C. Scheme drawings
D. None of the above
Q3) When attention is attracted by any visual feature such that all other
feature tend to lose significance. This effect is called _________
A. Brightness ratio
B. Acuity
C. Figure on ground
D. Illumination
Q4) Confident recognition of visual statement is important in which of
the following design activity.
A. Ergonomics
B. Simulation
C. Aesthetics
D. Optimisation
Q5) The ability to perceive details is called ____________
A. Brightness ratio
B. Illumination ratio
C. Aesthetics
D. Acuity
Q6) __________ is concerned with ways of designing machines, operations
and work environments:-
A. Aesthetics
B. Ergonomics
C. Scaling
D. None of the above
Q7) Embodiment process runs in parallel with __________
A. Modelling
B. Value engineering
C. Industrial engineering aspects
D. None of the above
Q8) The _________ is the bridge between the conceptual stage of the
design and detail design
A) Concept selection
B) Embodiment
C) Modelling
D) None
Q9) The ____________ is biased towards ensuring useful products satisfy
and appeal to their users
A) Engineer design
B) Industrial design
C) Ergonomic
D) Aesthetic
Q10) ________ deals with user-friendly product
Q11) ________ aims for visually appealing product
Q12) _________ are drawn strictly to scale only very important dimensions
Q13) ________ model is computer based and allows dynamic
CHAPTER 6 – MODELLING
Rashmi, Madhuri, Anusha, Kirtana
Q1) One of the more widely used technique in simulation is
A) Structural analysis
B) Modelling analysis
C) Finite element analysis
D) None of these
Q2) There can be ______ criterion function / functions
A) 1
B) 2
C) 3
D) 4
Q3) These are always expressed as inequalities
A) Criterion functions
B) Regional constraints
C) Functional constraints
D) All of these
Q4) The first step in mathematical modelling is
A) To make assumptions
B) To replace reality with a simplified model
C) Input data is idealized
D) Definition of failure and it’s prevention
Q5) The search for the best compromise between the confliction criteria
is called
A) Sealing
B) Visualisation
C) Simplification
D) Optimisation
Chapter 6 - Modelling
By Preethi G, Archana S, Anisha Reddy, Divya R, Arpitha H
Q1) An optimization problem usually involves _____ as a functional
relationship
A) Criterion Function
B) Functional Constraint
C) Regional Constraint
D) All of these
Q2) The modelling method which involves creation of 2-0 and 3-0 models
are
A) Mathematical modelling
B) Scale models
C) Simulation
D) None of these
Q3) Which of these are not modelling principles
A) Synthesis
B) Iteration
C) Simulation
D) Scaling
Q4) Modelling is used in which stage
A) Embodiment
B) Concept selection
C) PDS
D) Detail design
Q5) Which of the following factors can be established by scale models
A) Aesthetics
B) Technical
C) Synthesis
D) Optimization
Chapter 6 - Modelling
Q1) ________ modelling where equations are developed and tested within
stated assumptions
A) Optimistic
B) Mathematical
C) Scale
D) Simulation
Chapter 7 – Detail Design (No ans provided)
Ashwini, Ruchi, Neha, Rama, Jomol
Q1) The general equation for factor of safety is
A) N = Load carrying capability / applied capability
B) N = Load applying capability / Stress capability
C) N = Nominal Stress / Max Stress
D) N = Load carrying capability / Ultimate strength
Q2) ________ is not a part of detail design
A) Evaluation
B) Optimization
C) Analysis
D) Simulation
Q3) Expansion of FMEA is
A) Failure Models and effective analysis
B) Failure modes and effects analysis
C) Failure mechanism and effective analysis
D) Fail models and effects analysis
Q4) the factors which mustn’t be taken into account in design are
A) Mean stress
B) Alternating stress
C) Review
D) Material ultimate tensile strength
Chapter 7 – Detail Design
Preethi Ganeshan, Archana S, Ainsha Reddy, Divya R, Arpitha H
Q1) The general equation for safety is
A) Load carrying capability / applied load
B) Applied load / load carrying capability
C) 6L / 6r
D) None of the above
Q2) Reliability is concerned with causes, _______ and _________
A) distribution and preparation of failure
B) detail and prediction
C) determination and prediction
D) distribution and prediction
Q3) The occurrence of failure is represented by the variable ______ & is
assigned a value between 1 and 10 where ____ is the highest failure rate
A) 0, 1
B) 0, 10
C) 1, 10
D) None of the above
Q4) Risk priority number is calculated as
A) RPN = P * O * D
B) RPN = C * O * D
C) RPN = S * O * B
D) RPN = S * O * D
5 If a system has 100 components each with reliability of 90 % (series),
find the reliability of the system
A) 2.656 * 10^-6
B) 2.656 * 10^-5
C) 2.656 * 10^-4
2.656 * 10^-3
Chapter 7 – Detail Design
Mridula V, Prerana, Himica, Megha L, Manjana (They did CH 7 and 8 combined)
Q1) If a and b are the components of a system, given R(a) = 0.9 and R(b)
= 0.9. What is the reliability of the system when in parallel?
A) 0.81
B) 0.99
C) 0.9
D) 1.011
Q2) Reliability is defined as :
A) Measure of the degree to which it meets the customer’s requirements.
B) The probability that a device or system, will operate without
failure for a given period of time.
C) Ensuring that all components have appropriate factors of safety and are
not over designed
D) None of the above
Chapter 8 – Design Management
Mridula V, Prerana, Himica, Megha L, Manjana (They did CH 7 and 8 combined)
Q1) Which international standard relates to quality specifications for
design, development, production, installation and servicing?
A) ISO 9000
B) ISO 9001
C) ISO 9002
D) ISO 9003
Q2) Which of the following is not an advantage of QFD
A. QFD helps to focus decisions
B. QFD provides traceability of decisions
C. QFD identifies constraints and is informative
D. QFD provides a common format for the whole project
Q3) Final review does not include:
A. Packaging and shipment
B. Post design services
C. Cost and timescale estimates
D. Operating instructions and handbooks
Chapter 10 – Presentation Techniques
Naseer Pasha and Group
Q1) Complete the series
Function---another designer--_____---free hand sketching____
A) Symbols & graph
B) Graph & sketch
C) Symbols & concept sketch
D) Rules & graph
Q2) The most important characteristics of drawing:
A) Code
B) Decode
C) Encode
D) None
Q3) The sketching skills developed by design engineer should
encompass
A) 3D image
B) Outline sketch
C) 2D image
D) All the above
Q4) Which of the following doesn’t under design report______
A) PDS
B) Contents
C) Optimization
D) Modelling
Q5) The main type of drawing used by designer is _______
A) Calibration drawing
B) Concept sketch
C) Scheme drawing
D) Mathematical drawing
Chapter 10 – Presentation Techniques
Anurag, Nishant S.P, Avinash, Praveen
Q1) Design responsibility includes
(A) Detail drawings
(B) Assembly drawings
(C) Arrangement drawings
(D) Concept sketch
Q2) Which of the following is not an important characteristic of drawing?
(A) Modelled property
(B) Receiver
(C) Sender
(D) Code
Q3) Scheme drawing comes under
(A) Design responsibility
(B) Drawing off responsibility
(C) Both a & b
(D) None
Q4) Project management does not include
(A) Describing the project
(B) Planning control charts
(C) Minutes of meeting
(D) Audit