GCSE. Design and Technology. Mark Scheme for June 2012

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GCSE Design and Technology General Certificate of Secondary Education Unit A514/03 Technical aspects of designing and making Mechanisms Mark Scheme for June 2012 Oxford Cambridge and RSA Examinations

OCR (Oxford Cambridge and RSA) is a leading UK awarding body, providing a wide range of qualifications to meet the needs of candidates of all ages and abilities. OCR qualifications include AS/A Levels, Diplomas, GCSEs, OCR Nationals, Functional Skills, Key Skills, Entry Level qualifications, NVQs and vocational qualifications in areas such as IT, business, languages, teaching/training, administration and secretarial skills. It is also responsible for developing new specifications to meet national requirements and the needs of students and teachers. OCR is a not-for-profit organisation; any surplus made is invested back into the establishment to help towards the development of qualifications and support, which keep pace with the changing needs of today s society. This mark scheme is published as an aid to teachers and students, to indicate the requirements of the examination. It shows the basis on which marks were awarded by examiners. It does not indicate the details of the discussions which took place at an examiners meeting before marking commenced. All examiners are instructed that alternative correct answers and unexpected approaches in candidates scripts must be given marks that fairly reflect the relevant knowledge and skills demonstrated. Mark schemes should be read in conjunction with the published question papers and the report on the examination. OCR will not enter into any discussion or correspondence in connection with this mark scheme. OCR 2012 Any enquiries about publications should be addressed to: OCR Publications PO Box 5050 Annesley NOTTINGHAM NG15 0DL Telephone: 0870 770 6622 Facsimile: 01223 552610 E-mail: publications@ocr.org.uk

1 (a) (i) Worm and (worm) wheel or gear, 1 Allow pinion. (iii) Large reduction in a single stage, cannot be reverse driven, stays where you leave it, good mechanical advantage, good accuracy, tends to stay where you put it, drives through 90 degrees. To lock worm wheel to shaft, provide positive drive to shaft, locate wheel / gear on shaft. 2 2x1 Any 2, accept makes it easy to steer for 1 mark high level of friction due to sliding contact patch means that it is NOT an efficient mechanism. 1 Allow holding the. on the shaft, stop.falling off the shaft. (b) (i) Any of lubrication, cooling, corrosion prevention, reduce friction, prevent metal to metal contact. 2 Watch for vague, repetitive answers, i.e. same thing said differently or hopeful guesses. So the flow is controlled (as oil is runny and would quickly run away), one drip at a time, ensuring a continuous but limited/small supply. 1 Fed in a controlled manner. (c) (i) Pipe work (A) Copper, steel. Makers Name Plate (B) Brass, aluminium Cast Body (C) Cast iron, iron, steel, mild steel Display Base (D) Any hardwood, oak, pine. 4 4x1 Allow aluminium for Cast body Allow any named wood variety incl. soft/hard but not wood alone. Not MDF Connecting rod, con rod, crank rod. 1 Allow crank arm. Question 1 Total 12 2 (a) (i) Rack and pinion. 2 1 mark each word, allow miss-spellings Changes OSCILLATING (or Reciprocating) motion into ROTARY motion (or rotates). 2 2x1 Accept LINEAR into ROTARY, award 1 mark if Osc. and Rotary or Rotary into Linear. backwards and forwards into round and round scores 1 as it lacks technical clarity. No mark if single word describing part of mechanism movement. 1

(iii) Part A moves up and down, part B rotates (direction not relevant, Part C rotates in opposite direction to arrows drawn on Part B. Double ended arrows fine so long as movements correct. Rack may have DE arrow with single direction on gears. 3 3x1 For the third mark part C MUST be the reverse of what is drawn on part B. Some candidates may draw four motions e.g. small and co-mounted large gear. Work backwards from C looking for correct motion up to 3 marks. b (i) Ratchet, ratchet and pawl, freewheel, one way clutch. 1 Must be a ratchet mechanism. When rotated in anti-clockwise direction, fingers (pawls) fly out and engage with ratchet ramps on inside, transferring motion or locking the drive. When inner motion stops, fingers are retracted/knocked back and the flywheel unit freewheels. 2 2 marks only if an engage/disengage action is adequately described. Accept one way nature of the mechanism correctly described. Ratchet only drives in one direction. (iii) A flywheel stores/saves (rotational) energy (for use later). 2 Needs stores or saves (or equivalent) AND energy (or equivalent, e.g. momentum) to gain 2 marks. 3 Total Question 2 12 (a) (i) ROTARY motion into RECIPROCATING (or reversed). 2 Only, order does not matter for 2 marks. Twice the radius shown, 2*45mm = 90 mm 1 Written or numerical, or both. (iii) A double-ended arrow indicating up and down. 1 If only a single ended arrow has been drawn, allow an up arrow, but not a down arrow. The part cannot move any further downwards. (b) 200*10=270*x. (or equivalent) 2000/270=7.4 2 1 mark for spotting the correct numbers 1 mark for the correct answer (working not needed) 2

(c)* Discussion of the benefits of CAD and subsequently CAM to the designer and manufacturer. All aspects relevant from ease of making changes through to worldwide communication of the design to remote manufacturing facility. Ability to simulate mechanisms action in software, prototype parts by Rapid Prototyping machines. 6 6X1 Level 1 (1-2 marks) Basic explanation, showing some understanding of CAD/CAM and their advantages. There will be little or no use of specialist terms. Answers may be ambiguous or disorganised or list like. Errors of grammar, punctuation and spelling may be intrusive. Total Question 3 12 Section A Total 36 Level 2 (3-4 marks) Adequate explanation, showing an understanding of CAD/CAM and their advantages. There will be some use of specialist terms, although these may not always be used appropriately. The information will be presented for the most part in a structured format. There may be occasional errors in spelling, grammar and punctuation. Level 3 (5-6 marks) Thorough explanation, showing clear understanding of CAD/CAM and their advantages. There will be three of more clearly identified and explained points. Specialist terms will be used appropriately and correctly. The information will be presented in a structured format. The candidate will demonstrate the accurate use of spelling, punctuation and grammar. 3

Section B 4 (a) (i) Any of positive drive, low maintenance, long service life, no lubrication required, high power transmission capability, maintains timing, silent running. 2 2X1 Allow reference to efficiency for 1 mark Any two of toothed belts are often used as timing belts, if belt breaks damage can be caused by parts colliding (due to) miss-timing, belt materials decays, belt / teeth wear out, can strip a tooth/teeth. (iii) Any of: Lower maintenance costs, (as) chains last longer / don t wear out, less likely to fail, are physically smaller than a belt. Takes shock loads well. (b) Grease is easier to retain in the bearing, does not run out, does not leak away in use. More solid, last longer, greater viscosity. (c) Discussion around the closed shop/monopoly of being tied to the maker for servicing and repair, and/or the moral/environmental costs of a product that has failed and may be deemed BER or which has been deliberately made inaccessible to the end user. To be added to in light of candidate response. 2 2x1 Not stretching but allow for wear induced slack issues. 1 Allow stronger. Not more reliable. 1 6 6x1 Allow 1 mark for a statement like buy a new one (or similar). Level 1 (1-2 marks) Basic explanation, showing some understanding of the closed shop/monopoly of being tied to the maker for servicing and repair, and/or the moral/environmental/financial costs of a product that has failed and may be deemed BER or has been deliberately made inaccessible to the end user. There will be little or no use of specialist terms. Answers may be ambiguous or disorganised or list like. Errors of grammar, punctuation and spelling may be intrusive. Level 2 (3-4 marks) Adequate explanation, showing an understanding of the closed shop/monopoly of being tied to the maker for servicing and repair, and/or the moral/environmental/financial costs of a product that has failed and may be deemed BER or has been deliberately made inaccessible to the end user. 4

There will be some use of specialist terms, although these may not always be used appropriately. The information will be presented for the most part in a structured format. There may be occasional errors in spelling, grammar and punctuation Question 4 Total 12 5 (a) (i) Sketches and notes need to show: 2 drive systems one to each propeller, and two correct contra rotating propellers. Level 3 (5-6 marks) Thorough explanation, showing clear understanding of the closed shop/monopoly of being tied to the maker for servicing and repair, and/or the moral/environmental/financial costs of a product that has failed and may be deemed BER or has been deliberately made inaccessible to the end user. There will be three of more clearly identified and explained points. Specialist terms will be used appropriately and correctly. The information will be presented in a structured format. The candidate will demonstrate the accurate use of spelling, punctuation and grammar 4 4x1 If no pulleys shown, (just lines) then 3 marks maximum. Quick way of researching a solution, does it work as planned, eliminate errors, wasted time/costs of something that turns out faulty. 2 Vague repetitive answers lacking depth or reason score 1 mark. Quick alone scores 0 Look for an advantage and then an explanation/reason. (b) (i) A smart material is a material whose properties can be significantly changed in a controlled manner by the application of temperature, stress, magnetic field or by the passing of electricity (causing heat) through them. 2 Weak explanation with no reference to what causes the change only gains 1 mark. Reference to heat or electricity alone with no smart material mentioned scores zero. Effect of heat. Polymorph: Softens when heated (at 62C) SMA: returns to previous shape 4 4x1 Temperature NOT required for mark. NOT melts alone. SMA also known as memory wire, muscle wire, Nitol 5

Effect of Electricity. NOT melts as this does not display knowledge of SMA. Polymorph no effect (insulator), stays rigid SMA (conducts electricity so heating), returns to previous shape Question 5 Total 12 Paper Total 60 6

OCR (Oxford Cambridge and RSA Examinations) 1 Hills Road Cambridge CB1 2EU OCR Customer Contact Centre Education and Learning Telephone: 01223 553998 Facsimile: 01223 552627 Email: general.qualifications@ocr.org.uk www.ocr.org.uk For staff training purposes and as part of our quality assurance programme your call may be recorded or monitored Oxford Cambridge and RSA Examinations is a Company Limited by Guarantee Registered in England Registered Office; 1 Hills Road, Cambridge, CB1 2EU Registered Company Number: 3484466 OCR is an exempt Charity OCR (Oxford Cambridge and RSA Examinations) Head office Telephone: 01223 552552 Facsimile: 01223 552553 OCR 2011