HEAD
Sapali SN; Refrigeration and Air Conditioning; PHI
Ananthanarayan; Basic Refrigeration and Air conditioning; TMH
Manohar Prasad; Refrigeration and Air Conditioning; New Age Pub
Ameen; Refrigeration and Air Conditioning; PHI
Pita ; Air conditioning Principles and systems: an energy approach; PHI
Stoecker W.F, Jones J; Refrigeration and Air conditioning; McGH, Singapore
Jordan RC and Priester GB Refrigeration and Air Conditioning, PHI USA
Arora RC; Refrigeration and Air conditioning; PHI Learning
List of Experiments (Please Expand it): Refrigeration and Air Conditioning AU/ ME 803
General Study of vapor compression refrigeration system.
General Study of Ice Plant
General Study and working of cold storage
General Study Trane Air Condition (Package Type)
General Study of Electrolux Refrigeration
References 1. Chhabra, Ahuja & Jain, Planning Men at Work.
Enterprise Resource Planning, Concept and Practice Garg V.K. Venkitkrishnan N.K., PHI
Business Process Re-Engineering, Jayaraman, , TMH. 4. ERP by Alexis Leon
Entreprenurship and management Concept Dr.Puspendra Sharma & Keerti Sharma –Ik international Pub.
Murdick & Ross, Management Information System, PHI.
Definition of mechatronics. Mechatronics in manufacturing, products and design. Review of fundamentals of electronics.
Mechatronics elements Data conversion devices, sensors, micro sensors, transducers, signal processing devices, relays, contactors and timers.
Microprocessors, microcontrollers,PID controllers and PLCs. Drives and mechanisms of an automated system Drives: stepper motors, servo drives. Ball screws, linear motion bearings, cams, systems controlled by camshafts, electronic cams, indexing mechanisms, tool magazines, and transfer systems.
Boucher, T. O., Computer automation in manufacturing - an Introduction, Chapman and Hall, 1996.
HMT ltd. Mechatronics, Tata Mcgraw-Hill, New Delhi, 1988
[1 Deb,S. R., Robotics technology and flexible automation, Tata McGraw-Hill, New Delhi, 1994.
[2] Boltan, W., Mechatronics: electronic control systems in mechanical and electrical engineering, Longman,Singapore, 1999.
UNIT I PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICES OF MAINTENANCE PLANNING
Basic Principles of maintenance planning – Objectives and principles of planned maintenance activity – Importance and benefits of sound Maintenance systems – Reliability and machine availability – MTBF, MTTR and MWT – Factors of availability – Maintenance organization – Maintenance economics.
UNIT II MAINTENANCE POLICIES – PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE
Maintenance categories – Comparative merits of each category – Preventive maintenance, maintenance schedules, repair cycle - Principles and methods of lubrication – TPM. Maintenance policies for corrective maintenance, design-out-maintenance.
UNIT III CONDITION MONITORING
Condition Monitoring – Cost comparison with and without CM – On-load testing and offload testing – Methods and instruments for CM – Temperature sensitive tapes – Pistol thermometers – wear-debris analysis, Introduction to vibrtaion monitoring.
UNIT IV REPAIR METHODS FOR BASIC MACHINE ELEMENTS
Repair methods for beds, slide ways, spindles, gears, lead screws and bearings – Failure analysis – Failures and their development – Logical fault location methods – Sequential fault location.
UNIT V REPAIR METHODS FOR MATERIAL HANDLING EQUIPMENT
Repair methods for Material handling equipment - Equipment records –Job order systems -Use of computers in maintenance. Reconditioning of equipments.
References:
Maintenance Engineering and Management” by R C Mishra and K Pathak
Maintenance Engineering Hand Book” by Morrow
Plant Engineer’s Handbook” by R Keith Mobley
Maintenance Engineering” by Srivastava S K
Reliability and Maintenance Engineering” by R C Mishra
Objectives of the course Minor/Major Project are:
To provide students with a comprehensive experience for applying the knowledge gained so far by studying various courses.
To develop an inquiring aptitude and build confidence among students by working on solutions of small industrial problems.
To give students an opportunity to do something creative and to assimilate real life work situation in institution.
To adapt students for latest development and to handle independently new situations
To develop good expressions power and presentation abilities in students.
The focus of the Major Project is on preparing a working system or some design or understanding of a complex system using system analysis tools and submit it the same in the form of a write up i.e. detail project report. The student should select some real life problems for their project and maintain proper documentation of different stages of project such as need analysis market analysis, concept evaluation, requirement specification, objectives, work plan, analysis, design, implementation and test plan. Each student is required to prepare a project report and present the same at the final examination with a demonstration of the working system
(if any)
Working schedule The faculty and student should work according to following schedule: Each student undertakes substantial and individual project in an approved area of the subject and supervised by a member of staff. The student must submit outline and action plan for the project execution (time schedule) and the same be approved by the concerned faculty.
Action plan for Major Project work and its evaluation scheme #(Suggestive)
Task/Process | week | Evaluation | Marks for term work# |
Orientation of students by HOD/Project Guide | 1st | - | - |
Literature survey and resource collection | 2nd | - | - |
Selection and finalization of topic before a committee* | 3rd | Seminar-I | 10 |
Detailing and preparation of Project (Modeling, Analysis and Design of Project work | 4th & 5th | - | 10 |
Development stage | - | ||
Testing, improvements, quality control of projec | 6th to 10th 11th | - | 25 |
Acceptance testing | 12th | - | 10 |
Report Writing | 13th to 15th | - | 15 |
Presentation before a | 16th | Seminars | 30 |
committee (including user manual, if any) |
Committee comprises of HOD, all project supervisions including external guide from industry (if any) # the above marking scheme is suggestive, it can be changed to alternative scheme depending on the type of project, but the alternative scheme should be prepared in advance while finalizing the topic of project before a committee and explained to the concerned student as well.
NOTE: At every stage of action plan, students must submit a write up to the concerned guide:
=======Sapali SN; Refrigeration and Air Conditioning; PHI
Ananthanarayan; Basic Refrigeration and Air conditioning; TMH
Manohar Prasad; Refrigeration and Air Conditioning; New Age Pub
Ameen; Refrigeration and Air Conditioning; PHI
Pita ; Air conditioning Principles and systems: an energy approach; PHI
Stoecker W.F, Jones J; Refrigeration and Air conditioning; McGH, Singapore
Jordan RC and Priester GB Refrigeration and Air Conditioning, PHI USA
Arora RC; Refrigeration and Air conditioning; PHI Learning
List of Experiments (Please Expand it): Refrigeration and Air Conditioning AU/ ME 803
General Study of vapor compression refrigeration system.
General Study of Ice Plant
General Study and working of cold storage
General Study Trane Air Condition (Package Type)
General Study of Electrolux Refrigeration
References 1. Chhabra, Ahuja & Jain, Planning Men at Work.
Enterprise Resource Planning, Concept and Practice Garg V.K. Venkitkrishnan N.K., PHI
Business Process Re-Engineering, Jayaraman, , TMH. 4. ERP by Alexis Leon
Entreprenurship and management Concept Dr.Puspendra Sharma & Keerti Sharma –Ik international Pub.
Murdick & Ross, Management Information System, PHI.
Definition of mechatronics. Mechatronics in manufacturing, products and design. Review of fundamentals of electronics.
Mechatronics elements Data conversion devices, sensors, micro sensors, transducers, signal processing devices, relays, contactors and timers.
Microprocessors, microcontrollers,PID controllers and PLCs. Drives and mechanisms of an automated system Drives: stepper motors, servo drives. Ball screws, linear motion bearings, cams, systems controlled by camshafts, electronic cams, indexing mechanisms, tool magazines, and transfer systems.
Boucher, T. O., Computer automation in manufacturing - an Introduction, Chapman and Hall, 1996.
HMT ltd. Mechatronics, Tata Mcgraw-Hill, New Delhi, 1988
[1 Deb,S. R., Robotics technology and flexible automation, Tata McGraw-Hill, New Delhi, 1994.
[2] Boltan, W., Mechatronics: electronic control systems in mechanical and electrical engineering, Longman,Singapore, 1999.
UNIT I PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICES OF MAINTENANCE PLANNING
Basic Principles of maintenance planning – Objectives and principles of planned maintenance activity – Importance and benefits of sound Maintenance systems – Reliability and machine availability – MTBF, MTTR and MWT – Factors of availability – Maintenance organization – Maintenance economics.
UNIT II MAINTENANCE POLICIES – PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE
Maintenance categories – Comparative merits of each category – Preventive maintenance, maintenance schedules, repair cycle - Principles and methods of lubrication – TPM. Maintenance policies for corrective maintenance, design-out-maintenance.
UNIT III CONDITION MONITORING
Condition Monitoring – Cost comparison with and without CM – On-load testing and offload testing – Methods and instruments for CM – Temperature sensitive tapes – Pistol thermometers – wear-debris analysis, Introduction to vibrtaion monitoring.
UNIT IV REPAIR METHODS FOR BASIC MACHINE ELEMENTS
Repair methods for beds, slide ways, spindles, gears, lead screws and bearings – Failure analysis – Failures and their development – Logical fault location methods – Sequential fault location.
UNIT V REPAIR METHODS FOR MATERIAL HANDLING EQUIPMENT
Repair methods for Material handling equipment - Equipment records –Job order systems -Use of computers in maintenance. Reconditioning of equipments.
References:
Maintenance Engineering and Management” by R C Mishra and K Pathak
Maintenance Engineering Hand Book” by Morrow
Plant Engineer’s Handbook” by R Keith Mobley
Maintenance Engineering” by Srivastava S K
Reliability and Maintenance Engineering” by R C Mishra
Objectives of the course Minor/Major Project are:
To provide students with a comprehensive experience for applying the knowledge gained so far by studying various courses.
To develop an inquiring aptitude and build confidence among students by working on solutions of small industrial problems.
To give students an opportunity to do something creative and to assimilate real life work situation in institution.
To adapt students for latest development and to handle independently new situations
To develop good expressions power and presentation abilities in students.
The focus of the Major Project is on preparing a working system or some design or understanding of a complex system using system analysis tools and submit it the same in the form of a write up i.e. detail project report. The student should select some real life problems for their project and maintain proper documentation of different stages of project such as need analysis market analysis, concept evaluation, requirement specification, objectives, work plan, analysis, design, implementation and test plan. Each student is required to prepare a project report and present the same at the final examination with a demonstration of the working system
(if any)
Working schedule The faculty and student should work according to following schedule: Each student undertakes substantial and individual project in an approved area of the subject and supervised by a member of staff. The student must submit outline and action plan for the project execution (time schedule) and the same be approved by the concerned faculty.
Action plan for Major Project work and its evaluation scheme #(Suggestive)
Task/Process | week | Evaluation | Marks for term work# |
Orientation of students by HOD/Project Guide | 1st | - | - |
Literature survey and resource collection | 2nd | - | - |
Selection and finalization of topic before a committee* | 3rd | Seminar-I | 10 |
Detailing and preparation of Project (Modeling, Analysis and Design of Project work | 4th & 5th | - | 10 |
Development stage | - | ||
Testing, improvements, quality control of projec | 6th to 10th 11th | - | 25 |
Acceptance testing | 12th | - | 10 |
Report Writing | 13th to 15th | - | 15 |
Presentation before a | 16th | Seminars | 30 |
committee (including user manual, if any) |
Committee comprises of HOD, all project supervisions including external guide from industry (if any) # the above marking scheme is suggestive, it can be changed to alternative scheme depending on the type of project, but the alternative scheme should be prepared in advance while finalizing the topic of project before a committee and explained to the concerned student as well.
NOTE: At every stage of action plan, students must submit a write up to the concerned guide:
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