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MSE607B Systems Engineering

MSE607B Systems Engineering. Introduction. Learning Objectives. Give an overview of concepts and methods of systems engineering and management Considerations of life cycles, requirements, and configuration and cost management

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MSE607B Systems Engineering

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  1. MSE607BSystems Engineering Introduction

  2. Learning Objectives • Give an overview of concepts and methods of systems engineering and management • Considerations of life cycles, requirements, and configuration and cost management • Standards, metrics, architectures, integration, and evaluation will be discussed • Structured methods, decision analysis, and quality engineering foundations are emphasized • Case studies from a variety of industrial contexts are presented and discussed

  3. Background and Purpose • System engineering addresses various needs to be more effective and efficient in: • Development and acquisition of new systems • Operation and support of systems already in use • Survey of relevant tools and techniques • Their relationships to effective systems engineering management

  4. Textbook System Engineering Management, third edition (2004)by Blanchard, Benjamin S • New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. • Hardcover • List Price: $110.00 • ISBN: 0-471-29176-5 • Superbookdeals.com  $64.78 (new) • Amazon.com  $100.06 (new) • Half.com  $60.00 (used) • Matador Bookstore  $88.25 (used)  $117.50 (new)

  5. Contact Info • David Shternberg • BS Manufacturing Systems Engineering • MS Manufacturing Systems Engineering & Management • General Manager, Maintco Corporation, Burbank • E-mail Address (use all three) • CSUN - david.shternberg@csun.edu • Work - david@maintco.com • Home – ds823@aol.com • Work 818-655-6401 • Cell 818-521-0751 • Meeting by appointment only 6-7PM EA1308

  6. My Work Experience • Israeli Air Force • F-16 Mechanic 1980-1981 • F-16 Mechanical Systems Instructor 1981-1984 • Israeli Aircraft Industries 1984-1986 • Ground test inspector • CRANE Hydro-Aire, Burbank CA 1986-2003 • Mfg Engineer, Producibility Mgr, Lean & Cont Improvement Mgr • Eaton Aerospace, Los Angeles Jan-2004 - July 2005 • Manufacturing Manager • Mfg Eng & Fabrication Focus Factory Manager • Manufacturing and Sustaining Engineering Manager • Maintco Corporation, Burbank, Aug-2005 – July 2006 • General Manager • Eaton Aerospace, Los Angeles July-2006 - Present • Manufacturing Engineering Manager

  7. My Academic Records • Holtz Academy of Aviation Technology, Tel-Aviv, Israel 1975-1980 • Certified Aircraft Technician • Associate Engineer • Santa Monica College 1989-1993 • AA Degree • California State University, Northridge 1994-1999 • BS Mfg Systems Engineering • California State University, Northridge 2001-2003 • MS Mfg Systems Engineering & Management • Part-time MSEM faculty member since Jan 2004

  8. Course E-mail List • To promote email as an effective communication mechanism for both faculty and students, a mailing list for MSE607B class was established. • Email messages to this class mailing list and each member of the list will receive a copy of those messages. • Two names (email aliases) for the class mailing list created, either of can be used: • The first alias is based on the class number (aka ticket number) classFA06.11768-c@csun.edu • The second alias is based on the subject, catalog number, and section fa06.mse607b.01-c@csun.edu • This list was populated with my email address (shternberg@csun.edu) and with each student's campus email address that was enrolled in this class • The list is automatically updated on a weekly basis (until census) to reflect the current enrollment of the class • No need to maintain the list. • For the list to be effective, all students must activate their campus email account and monitor their email. • Students may activate their campus email by logging into the Portal (https://www.csun.edu/portal). • If students would prefer to receive campus email to a non-campus email account such as Yahoo or Hotmail, they may configure mail-forwarding to that account via the account maintenance web site (https://www.csun.edu/account). • To minimize potential of receiving spam, it is configured it to be a "closed" list. • As a closed list, only members of the list may post messages to it. • Consequently, students may send email to this list using only their campus email address

  9. Class Material • Website URL • http://www.csun.edu/~shternberg/mse607b.htm • MSE607B Course Page • Login: shternberg • Password: mse607b • Class Syllabus • PowerPoint Presentations • Schedule of classes • My E-mail and phone numbers

  10. Reading Assignments • Essential for interaction and understanding • Read assigned chapter prior to class • Prepare to discuss issues/questions • Preparation will make the course more interesting • Pop-quiz may be given • Next week’s assignment • Chapter 1 – Introduction to Systems Engineering (pp. 1-45)

  11. Course Performance Evaluation Structure • 25 % Mid-Term Chapters 1-4 • 25 % Final Exam (comprehensive) • 35 % Team Research Project • 5 % Attendance and professionalism • 10 % Participation and active learning (based in part on Partnership Peer Review Reports) • Letter-Grade Scale • Plus/Minus will be used

  12. Standard Operating Procedures • Encouraged to maintain personal and professional standards consistent with The Fundamental Principles of the Code of Ethics of the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET): • Engineers uphold and advance the integrity, honor and dignity of the engineering profession by: • Using their knowledge and skill for the enhancement of human welfare • Being honest and impartial, and serving with fidelity the public, their employers and clients • Striving to increase the competence and prestige of the engineering profession • Supporting the professional technical societies of their disciplines

  13. Student Roles & Responsibilities • Attend class sessions and to be prompt • Be a team player • Submit original work only • I was a student too… • Be considerate and respectful of one another • Get the job done right and on time • Budgeting 5-6 hours per week for this course, in addition to class attendance, is not unreasonable

  14. Course Overview

  15. Chapter 1Introduction to Systems Engineering • Abbreviated introduction to some of the key terms and definitions inherent in the discussions throughout subsequent chapters • Systems • System Analysis • System Science • System Engineering • Life Cycle • Natural introduction to the system engineering process discussed in chapter 2

  16. Chapter 2The System Engineering Process • Relates terms and definitions introduced in chapter 1 to the system life cycle • Establishes a baseline to provide a frame of reference for the discussion of: • Individual design disciplines • Design methods, and • The activities associated with system engineering • The system engineering process is presented in the form of an overview • The concepts introduced here are amplified In subsequent chapters, to a much greater degree • Necessary prerequisite to the information presented later

  17. Chapter 3System Design Requirements • The design requirements through the development of specifications • Requirements for reliability, maintainability, supportability, quality, and alike • Few design disciplines such as these are discussed • Review some of the details as they pertain to individual design disciplines • Introduction to a select sample of disciplines • Importance of design integration through application of system engineering methods

  18. Chapter 4Engineering Design Methods and Tools • Briefly highlight some of the recent concepts in design • Conventional design practices • Analytical methods • The role of • Electric Commerce (EC) • Information Technology (IT) • The Internet • Current Design Technologies and Tools • Simulation • Rapid Prototyping • Mock-ups • Computer Aided Design (CAD) • Computer-Aided Manufacturing (CAM) • Computer-Aided Support (CAS) • System engineering objectives as they relate to current design methods

  19. Chapter 5Design Review and Evaluation • Explain the basic philosophy of design evolution • Describe the evaluation methods • Explain the informal and formal design reviews • Explain the feedback and corrective-action loop associated with these activities

  20. Chapter 6System Engineering Program Planning • Introduce system engineering program planning • First step in system management. • Material presented in this module leads into the discussion of • The organization for system engineering in module 7 • System engineering program evaluation in module 8

  21. Chapter 7Organization for System Engineering • Explain the basic philosophy of design evolution • Explain the different types of organizational structures • Discuss advantages and disadvantages of each structure from a generic perspective • Emphasize the system engineering organization, its functions, organizational interfaces, and the staffing needed • Explain the implementation of Integrated Product and Process Development (IPPD) configuration • Explain customer, producer, and supplier relationships • Discuss human resources requirements

  22. Chapter 8System Engineering Program Evaluation • Explain the evaluation requirements of systems engineering program • Describe benchmarking best practices in system engineering • Explain the evaluation of system engineering organization • Explain program reporting, feedback and control

  23. Homework Assignment • Read Chapter 1 • Introduction to System Engineering • Pages 1-44

  24. Questions? Comments?

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