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Retooling Manufacturing: Bridging Design, Materials, and Production (2004)

Chapter: Appendix B: Meeting Agendas

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Suggested Citation:"Appendix B: Meeting Agendas." National Research Council. 2004. Retooling Manufacturing: Bridging Design, Materials, and Production. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11049.
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Appendix B
Meeting Agendas

Meeting One

February 24-25, 2003

Keck Center of the National Academies

Acquisition-Focused Basic Research: Context and Initial Thoughts

John H. Hopps, Jr., Department of Defense

Materials and Processing Models

Peter Angelini, Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Predictive Product Realization—Bridging

Design and Manufacturing Through Modeling and Simulation

Delcie R. Durham, National Science Foundation

Models of Products and Processes

Daniel E. Whitney, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Observations on the Uses of Modeling and Simulation

Michael Lilienthal, Defense Modeling and Simulation Office (retired)

Computational Engineering Sciences for Design to Manufacturing

Thomas C. Bickel, Sandia National Laboratories

Modeling and Simulation in Aerospace Industry

James W. Hollenbach, Simulation Strategies

Modeling and Simulation in the U.S. Automotive Industry

Jack F. White, Altarum

Bridging Design and Manufacturing: Electronics Industry View

Thomas S. Babin, Motorola Advanced Technology Center

Meeting Two

April 29-30, 2003

Keck Center of the National Academies

Tools for Accelerated Insertion of Materials into Systems

Leo Christodoulou, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency

Life Cycle Behavior Models and Tools

John L. Sullivan, Ford Motor Company

Digital Manufacturing Tools

Robert Brown, Delmia Corporation

Model-Based Development of Embedded Systems

Hans-Peter Hoffmann, I-Logix

Interoperability Considerations for Manufacturing Simulation and Visualization Tools

Chuck McLean, National Institute of Standards and Technology

Suggested Citation:"Appendix B: Meeting Agendas." National Research Council. 2004. Retooling Manufacturing: Bridging Design, Materials, and Production. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11049.
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Use of Models in the Development of Implantable Devices

Jonathan Krueger, Guidant Corporation

Simulation and Modeling for Acquisition, Requirements, and Training

W.H. (Dell) Lunceford, Jr., Army Model and Simulation Office

Design by Simulation for Mars Entry Descent and Landing Systems

Adam D. Steltzner, Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Development of Uninhabited Combat Aerial Vehicles

Allen Haggerty, Vice President—General Manager Engineering (ret.), Boeing Military Aircraft and Missiles

Opportunities in Modeling and Simulation to Enable Dramatic Improvements in Ordnance Design

Robert K. Garrett, Jr., Naval Surface Warfare Center

Virtual Aluminum Castings

John Allison, Ford Motor Company

Meeting Three

June 25-26, 2003

Ford Motor Company

Overview of the Ford Product Development System

Chris Minger, Ford Motor Company

Analytical Powertrain: Product Development Process

Agus Sudjianto, Ford Motor Company

Virtual Product Creation and Virtual Manufacturing Engineering

Shuh-Yuan Liou, Ford Motor Company

Virtual Manufacturing—Rough Parts Forming

Alan Lecz, Ford Motor Company

Roundtable on Automotive Industry (Discussion of best practices, identification of gaps and what is needed to bridge the design to manufacturing gap)

Will Guerra, DaimlerChrysler Corporation

Alan N. Baumgartner, Ford Motor Company

Steven W. Holland, General Motors

Arthur H. Adlam, Jr., U.S. Army TACOM

Mohammad Usman, Visteon

Prasad Mangalaramanan, Dana Corporation

Ray Quatrochi, Federal Mogul Corporation

Joseph A. Spiegel, Intermet Corporation

Bryan Froese, Meridian Castings

Translating Design to Manufacturing: Army Trucks

Arthur H. Adlam, Jr., U.S. Army TACOM

Sheet Metal Process Modeling and Its Use on the Manufacturing Shop Floor

Edmund Chu, Alcoa Inc.

Advanced Engineering Environments for Small Manufacturing Enterprises

Joseph P. Elm, Software Engineering Institute, Carnegie Mellon University

Integration of Nanotechnology Manufacturing Processes into Microsystems

Gregory W. Auner, Wayne State University

Real Time NDE to Validate Product Designs and Manufacturing

Connie Philips, National Center for Manufacturing Sciences

Meeting Four

August 25-26, 2003

J. Erik Johnson Center

CAD Tools Evolution and Compatibility

Chris Hoffmann, Purdue University

Trends Associated with Data Representation and Integration

Fred Waskiewicz, Object Management Group

Suggested Citation:"Appendix B: Meeting Agendas." National Research Council. 2004. Retooling Manufacturing: Bridging Design, Materials, and Production. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11049.
×
Page 97
Suggested Citation:"Appendix B: Meeting Agendas." National Research Council. 2004. Retooling Manufacturing: Bridging Design, Materials, and Production. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11049.
×
Page 98
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As the Department of Defense continues development of the future warrior system, the difficulty of moving rapidly from design to manufacturing for complex technologies is becoming a major concern. In particular, there are communication gaps between design and manufacturing that hinder rapid development of new products important for these future military developments. To help address those concerns, DOD asked the NRC to develop a framework for “bridging” these gaps through data management, modeling, and simulation. This report presents the results of this study. It provides a framework for virtual design and manufacturing and an assessment of the necessary tools; an analysis of the economic dimensions; an examination of barriers to virtual design and manufacturing in the DOD acquisition process; and a series of recommendations and research needs.

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