Report Guidelines Design Assignment
Report Guidelines Design Assignment
(1) A written technical document in Word format (submitted to Engineering General Office
Box for Reports Submission).
(2) The supportive SolidWorks documents.
These supportive documents will be used as references for checking and evaluating
the design work presented and discussed in the written technical document (Submitted
via MyAberdeen).
The presentation format of the report should be standard and consistent, e.g. using Arial 12
font for the text body; different font sizes to distinguish the title, subtitle and texts in the main
body; fonts of bold, italic, or underlines can be used for titles, subtitles; reference format
should be consistent and in standard style (numbered or Harvard style). The structure of an
engineering design report is outlined in Appendix I.
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See Appendix I for more details about other sections.
As your submission involves multi-files, you must compress all files as one single file with
extension “.zip”. So, each group will submit only one single file (.zip). This needs to be strictly
followed.
All documents must be organised and entitled meaningfully, so that the markers can
understand what and where to look for the documents in your design/model and simulation.
Supporting documents must be submitted as one single .zip fike via MyAberdeen.
The submission deadline is 25th of April at 12:00 (noon). Late submission will result in
mark deduction.
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Appendix I Format and contents for a “Design report”
(1) Title
(2) Abstract
The “Abstract” is a brief technical outline of your design and the motivation for having
the design and the effectiveness of the design. The “Abstract” should give some
background information that the abstract is based on.
(4) Discussions,
The design itself should be presented in details. You can have several headings (e.g.
Theory, analysis, results). Compare with theory, show results in graphs if applicable
and discuss the meanings
a. The analysis of the design requirements, objectives, and functions using the
techniques covered in design process lectures.
b. The analysis and justifications of alternative solutions obtained in brainstorming
session.
c. The theory behind the design.
d. The problems encountered (or anticipated) in producing the design and how those
problems have been or could be overcome.
e. Detailed design, such as 3D modelling, technical drawings and analysis in SW.
f. The results of any tests on the design: analysis and examination of your design,
through analysing the load/pressure design, the implications to the results, and
Factor of Safety design, environment and budget.
Note: if your design turns up with a minimum factor of safety below the expected
value, give suggestions about how it can be improved and how this would affect
the use of the product (e.g. restrictions).
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g. Sustainability analysis and how such analysis can benefit your design.
h. Discussion and analysis of the materials for meeting the pressure requirement (if
applicable).
a. Summarise the design and testing work you have completed in your design. You
should also assess how (well or bad) the design meets the objectives included in
the “Introduction”.
b. Analyze, if the design does not meet the objectives (or some of the objectives),
why it was not successful and what could have been or would be done to improve
the design
c. Give a future perspective for how the design could be used or further developed in
the future.
(6) References