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Fuji Quick Snap Disposable Camera

Fuji Quick Snap Disposable Camera. Mike Rush, Scott Foremen, Linda Rosato , Ben Gao. Table of Contents. Design Task Survey Pie Chart Design Matrix Design Matrix Weighted Design Modifications E Waste E Waste Chart E Waste Health Effects Composition of Camera Cost Analysis

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Fuji Quick Snap Disposable Camera

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  1. Fuji Quick Snap Disposable Camera Mike Rush, Scott Foremen, Linda Rosato, Ben Gao

  2. Table of Contents • Design Task • Survey Pie Chart • Design Matrix • Design Matrix Weighted • Design Modifications • E Waste • E Waste Chart • E Waste Health Effects • Composition of Camera • Cost Analysis • Prototype • Conclusion • Questions • References

  3. Design Task • There is currently a declining demand for Disposable Camera’s. • We want to create a larger market by modifying the camera to create a larger demand for the product. • We found during our customer needs assessment that: • Potential customers want a modernized camera • Potential customers want to be able to reuse the camera • Design Specifications: • manufacturing the camera out of recycled materials • changing the flash to solar powered instead of battery powered • replacing the film with a USB capable storage stick

  4. Survey

  5. Design Matrix

  6. Design Matrix Weighted

  7. Design Modifications Modify the Fuji camera by: • manufacturing the camera out of recycled materials • changing the flash to solar powered • replacing the film with a USB capable storage stick These modifications were decided upon based on: • the life extension factors • ease of handling factors • environmental factors (Modifying the design to enable the consumer to replace the battery was disregarded due to the amount of E waste it would generate)

  8. E Waste • What is it? • The popular, informal name for electronic products nearing the end of their "useful life.“ • How much E Waste is generated • In 2005, used or unwanted electronics amounted to approximately 1.9 to 2.2 million tons • Where does E waste end up? In 2000: • Landfills - 1.8 million tons were put into landfills • Incinerators – 250 million products were incinerated • Storage - 460 million products were put into storage • Recycled - 345,000 to 379,000 tons were recycled

  9. E Waste

  10. E Waste • Acetonitrile • nausea, vomiting, slow pulse rate, coma • Ethylene Glycol • central nervous system, heart, kidneys • Dichloromethane • carbon monoxide poisoning, optic neuropathy, hepatitis, chemical burns, skin irritation, cancer, birth defects, fetal toxicity • N,N Dimethyleformamide • cancer, birth defects, liver abnormalities • Toluene • tiredness, confusion, weakness, drunken-type actions, memory loss, nausea, loss of appetite, and hearing and color vision loss

  11. Cost Analysis • Solar Flash • Solar Cell is $2-$3 • Battery is $0.75 • Removable Stick • $6.50/1 • $3.18/ 1 (wholesale)

  12. Outer Appearance Dimensions and Break Down Individual Parts

  13. Prototype • VIEW DRAWN PROTOTYPE

  14. Conclusion • Modifications: • Solar powered flash • Removable memory stick • Composed of recycled materials

  15. Questions?

  16. References • http://www.calrecycle.ca.gov/electronics/whatisewaste/ • http://www.greenpeace.org/international/en/campaigns/toxics/electronics/the-e-waste-problem/where-does-e-waste-end-up/ • http://www.dtsc.ca.gov/hazardouswaste/ewaste/ • http://www.epa.gov/osw/conserve/materials/ecycling/faq.htm • http://www.maine.gov/dep/rwm/ewaste/ • http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/geopedia/E-Waste • http://www.fujifilm.com/sustainability/report/pdf/index/ff_sr_2004_001.pdf

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