Sunday, February 22, 2015

Reverse Engineering

What is it about an object that captures a person’s attention? Its function—the speed, efficiency, reliability?  Its form— the color, shape, proportion? With an understanding of form follows function, and some insight into the visual design principles and elements, you will be able to create products that capture the attention and imagination of the viewer. 


This week, working in a team of two or three, you will act as an engineering team for a novelty toy company. Your company has noticed the skyrocketing sales of the Automoblox vehicles and would like to design accessories or enhancements that can be purchased separately but will work with the existing toys. As a first step, your team has been assigned the task of reverse engineering one of the Automoblox vehicles. This will follow a process of visual analysis, functional analysis, and structural analysis.

Deliverables

Monday, 2/23:
  • Intro to Reverse Engineering + Maker Faire prep
Tuesday, 2/24:
Wednesday, 2/25:
Thursday, 2/26:
  • Reverse Engineering Reflection Post
Friday, 2/27:
  • Instant Challenge

Reflection Post

How do visual design principles and elements impact the commercial appeal of a product?

What does a black box represent in the system input/output model?

Why do engineers perform reverse engineering on products, and how would you describe it in your own words?

Part of the mission of Automoblox is to "offer a high quality building system that will delight and inspire children while fostering the development of important skills and learning foundations." If given the opportunity, how would you improve the Automoblox design (visually, functionally, or structurally) while furthering the mission of the company at minimal cost?

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