| Electro-Mechanical Design Team Collaboration |
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| Written by Hans-Ulrich Heidbrink | |||||||
| Saturday, 01 September 2007 00:00 | |||||||
New tools help global design teams meet time-to-market constraints.Regardless of the industry segment, today’s consumer products nearly universally follow the trend of greater complexity in a smaller package. In this scenario, the electronics must not only meet the electrical guidelines, but also must meet specifications driven by usability and appearance. Design is no longer a single team task. Global design teams are part of the footrace to reach market windows on time. Parallel design activities are key to winning the competition in a world of products with ever-shorter lifecycles. Adding external design partners as well as outsourcing services for production requires new ways of design collaboration. True collaboration removes compartmentalization of responsibilities and enables cross-domain cooperation as the new business model. However, this new design methodology is not really reflected in current CAD design systems. Currently, CAD systems are segregated between electronic design and mechanical design. ECAD defines the design process for PCBs, and MCAD defines the enclosure design in which this PCB is mounted. As both design domains have become more sophisticated and specialized, systems have been developed for each, and the gap between the two disciplines has widened instead of narrowed. This has led to increasing design team communication problems and inefficiencies during product development that cannot be addressed with either existing interface standards or paper. The problem only gets worse with today’s trend toward the globalization of companies and the increase in design and manufacturing outsourcing. The most used collaboration method for fast results is still a common meeting where the recognized problem gets pointed out. Explaining by pointing a forefinger at a display or drawing is the most common method of cross-discipline communication. During this process, those involved are moving from one system to the other, and each designer shows possible solutions using his system, and is influenced to try other options by the cross-domain partner. Working in a CAD environment is preferred since it allows recognition of issues that can arise due to poor decisions in the process. This process is possible if both partners are working in the same building or site, but for a global team, travel cost and time restrictions in many cases prevent this approach. Moving the Manual Methodology Toward More Automation
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In the ECAD collaborator, this proposed change is shown in highlighted 3D (Figure 1) without any influence on the parallel visible native layout. By pushing the Validate button, the change is accepted and sent to a sandbox environment, which runs the DRC check routines. With a successful checkout, the engineer can accept the change by pushing the Accept button. But if design hazards are recognized and no other solutions are viable, the engineer can push the Reject button. Rejecting a modification reestablishes the previous design in the system and notifies the MCAD designer about the rejection. This does not allow the MCAD designer to progress with the change and undoes the initially proposed modification. Figure 2 shows how the rejected proposal appears on the tool’s screen.
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The originating engineer can propose a revised change, as shown in Figure 3. If the engineer using the ECAD system accepts the change, several processes can be implemented, depending on the company’s release policies and PLM (parallel lookup memory) structures. In the simplest case, ECAD notifies MCAD and both continue with the synchronized change. The final accepted change is shown in Figure 4.
Either domain can initiate the collaboration process. In real life, every change request cannot be evaluated immediately, and multiple requests might be queued. Workflow mechanisms track each individual process and can be used to document the process for quality or tracking purposes.
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This prototype implementation has been used to validate the collaboration data model. In a future product, additional features will be supported. To decouple change requests and open up multiple choice solutions, the collaborator will work with solution spaces and will be able to watch given boundary conditions. Chat functions will allow messaging between partners.
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IP protection and design setup functions for the easy start of collaboration are also necessary. Links to PLM and integration in library management systems will allow the management of ECAD libraries in combination with 3D part libraries, which might be available in different formats, such as VRML or J-T. This will allow the designer first to do collision reviews in her/his own environment before engaging the mechanical domain. Since the data model ensures only the owner of a design object is allowed to make changes in the native design, even unintended changes in the sandbox produce notifications to the owner. Additionally, filtering and selecting dedicated product elements can help users in collaboration situations where the protection of their own design know-how is key to keeping a competitive advantage. Selecting only those elements that are required to understand and visualize the problem is controlled by the user.
Looking Ahead
Such a collaboration method also allows for the generation of a baseline for a mechatronic-driven design without the use of other exchange standards. It will substitute IDF with a richer feature set and provide access to additional board elements to support better integration in mechanical designs.
With this methodology, one of the last rationalization roadblocks is opened for time-saving and enables design process improvements. The highest goal addressed is the increase of a designer’s creativity while solving difficult design tasks that can only be addressed in a cross-domain environment. PCD&M
Hans-Ulrich Heidbrink is director strategic business development, collaboration projects with the System Design Division of Mentor Graphics Corp. He can be reached at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .
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