Results of Applying a Families-of-Systems Approach to Systems Engineering of Product Line Families
2002-01-3086
11/18/2002
- Event
- Content
- Most of the history of systems engineering has been focused on processes for engineering a single complex system. However, most large enterprises design, manufacture, operate, sell, or support not one product but multiple product lines of related but varying systems. They seek to optimize time to market, costs of development and production, leverage of intellectual assets, best use of talented human resources, overall competitiveness, overall profitability and productivity. Optimizing globally across multiple product lines does not follow from treating each system family member as an independently engineered system or product. Traditional systems engineering principles can be generalized to apply to families. This article includes a multi-year case study of the actual use of a generic model-based systems engineering methodology for families, Systematica™, across the embedded electronic systems products of one of the world's largest manufacturers of heavy equipment.
- Pages
- 21
- Citation
- Schindel, W., and Smith, V., "Results of Applying a Families-of-Systems Approach to Systems Engineering of Product Line Families," SAE Technical Paper 2002-01-3086, 2002, https://doi.org/10.4271/2002-01-3086.