Engineering Desgin Process Pringle Project
Engineering Desgin Process Pringle Project
Engineering Desgin Process Pringle Project
Period: 1
Due Date: 03/22/2016
Date: 03/14/2016
My team and I must design and model a vehicle that will transport one Pringles potato chip via the U.S. Postal
Service. The potato chip must be mailed from home to school in a 3 x 5 envelope and may not exceed the postal
limit. We will do this by documenting the engineering design process in our engineering journals, creating a sketch
and prototype, and potentially testing the finished product before sending it out through the mail.
2.
Brainstorming
List/sketch possible solutions that might be used in your final design.
each of these ideas relates to the problem statement.
3.
Notes
Available for shipments up to 70 lbs and up to 130 inches in combined length and girth
Parcels that weigh less than 20 pounds but measure more than 84 inches (but not more than 108 inches) in
combined length and girth are charged the applicable price for a 20-pound parcel (balloon price)
The oversized price applies to pieces that measure over 108 inches but not more than 130 inches in combined
length and girth
The USPS Retail Ground price is charged per pound or fraction thereof; any fraction of a pound is considered a
whole pound. The minimum postage per piece is the 1-pound price
Resources:
http://www.slideshare.net/ramprasad3165/final-pringles-powerpoint
https://www.usps.com/ship/mail-shipping-services.htm?
4.
Criteria
Constraints
5.
Exploring possibilities
Reflect on your brainstormed ideas and research notes and describe the plusses and minuses of each
design approach you have considered.
Brainstorming Idea
Put the pringle in an
enclosed box made
of index cards and
cut straws for
dimension (3D)
Cut up straws and
put them in a box
formation for
cushion for the
pringle
Put pringle in the
middle of an X
made by straws in
between index cards
Pluses
-Less work
-Less material
-Safe core packaging
Minuses
-Chip could move around when moved
-Not as sturdy
-Chip could be easily broken because this model
allows movement
-Cushioned
-Thinner box
-safe core packaging
-sturdy
-chip is not allowed a lot of
movement
-secured well
-not time consuming
6. Selecting an Approach
a. Enter the constraints and criteria of the project in the first column.
b. Score your brainstorming ideas against each constraint or criteria and indicate how well the idea
meets the criteria and constraints.
3 pts = easily meets, 2 pts = somewhat meets, 1 pt. = does not meet
c. Total the columns and circle the highest score to indicate your best design idea.
Constraint/Criteria
Does it meet
the
requirements
Enclosed box with cut up
12
straws for cushion
Pringle in the
14 middle of
an X
11
Enclosed box
Time to
build
Could
envelope
break
Is it too
bulky
Appropriate
resources
used
Qty
Straws
Index cards
Tape
3 inches
Chip
Envelope
Construction in-process
Construction in-process
Final Product
Engineering Design Process, until you find a functional design. In the space below, document the type
of tests you conducted and the results.
Test Performed
Test Results
11.Creating or Making It
Modify your model/prototype to incorporate the design refinements you identified in section 10. What
additional steps would be necessary to produce the final product for the customer?
to the teacher.