70950 SYSTEM DESIGN

FACULTY OF ENGINEERING & SURV. 1998

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Credit Points 1.00

Pre-requisite: 70650

Synopsis


Most  engineering products form part of a system which can  be  broken
down  into  sub  systems,  assemblies and components.  A  considerable
amount  of design synthesis and analysis has to be done on the  system
as  a  whole before a product or process design specification  can  be
drawn  up.  It  is therefore important that the engineer  is  able  to
recognise  what forms a system, a subsystem and a component,  and  how
the performance of the whole system is affected by the performance  of
its  constituent parts. In systems design, the engineer considers  the
widest  implications of a product, project or process  at  the  design
stage,  including not only the technical interactions of  the  various
subsystems,  but  also the political, sociological and  socio-economic
implications.

This unit leads the student to an understanding of the philosophy  and
methodology  of  the design process in the context  of  systems  which
embrace  political, sociological, economic as well  as  technical  and
ergonomic  aspects. It then provides practice through assignments  and
workshops in developing the student's ability to discern the  relevant
factors and design accordingly, to interact within a design team,  and
to   communicate   ideas  and  concepts  through  oral   and   written
presentations.