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Engineering Mechanics / Hydraulics etc... (1 Viewer)

lemon1

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I need more sources to learn these from, anyone have anything that could help? I'm about to go in only knowing how to do truss analysis...
 

Leffife

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I'll PM you a site, that I found quite good. I don't do engineering studies by the way.
 

machine2035

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I need more sources to learn these from, anyone have anything that could help? I'm about to go in only knowing how to do truss analysis...
Oh well that could be seen as a good thing.. Q12 is given to be a truss analysis :D
 

zhou

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the engineering mechanics textbook by schlenker does wonders, but if you don't have a copy from your school already, i guess there's no point
 

lemon1

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the engineering mechanics textbook by schlenker does wonders, but if you don't have a copy from your school already, i guess there's no point
may i ask if it covers the whole engineering courses mechanics? like from aeronautics, lifting devices etc..

:)

@Leffife thanks very much!
@machine2035 Haha not every year, but hopefully it is :p
 

zhou

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may i ask if it covers the whole engineering courses mechanics? like from aeronautics, lifting devices etc..
It covers everything. Chapters: forces, power, truss analysis, stress/strain and so on, all that's in the syllabus and a little beyond... it has good examples/explanations as well as plentiful questions.
 

lemon1

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Great, do you think it's a popular book which i could find somewhere in Angus and Robertson or whatever that book stores name was? Or better yet a online copy or something haha :p
 

zhou

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definitely not, sorry. everyone i've seen has gotten a copy from their respective schools. if you cannot get a copy from your school today, you'll have to work off Excel Engineering or another textbook.
 

eshaygabberbrah

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i also can do nothing besides truss analysis!!
Does anyone have any suggestions on what i should be studying with 12 hours of cramming?

OR can anyone tell me how to do calculations involving angles? they dont look to hard i was just never taught how to do them.
 

mark120

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Great, do you think it's a popular book which i could find somewhere in Angus and Robertson or whatever that book stores name was? Or better yet a online copy or something haha :p
It is kinda last minute but the Excel book is really good for explanations.

i also can do nothing besides truss analysis!!
Does anyone have any suggestions on what i should be studying with 12 hours of cramming?
OR can anyone tell me how to do calculations involving angles? they dont look to hard i was just never taught how to do them.
You just need to be able to use trigonometry to manipulate the forces, so you can find the horizontal and vertical components
 

zhou

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i also can do nothing besides truss analysis!!
Does anyone have any suggestions on what i should be studying with 12 hours of cramming?

OR can anyone tell me how to do calculations involving angles? they dont look to hard i was just never taught how to do them.
I can only advise you to do some engineering past paper questions involving calculations. Calculations are a major part of the examination and are easy to scab marks off, even if your final answer is wrong.

Make sure you can relate a question to a formula on the formula sheet on the back of the examination paper. Convert all of the given values into SI units (such a m, s, N, etc.) and solve for the unknown.
Convert the SI units to what the question may ask you if need be..

In regards to questions with angles, I think it's best to do them graphically, that is, drawing all the available forces to scale and in the correct angle. Then finding the unknowns by drawing to scale the direction of the force of the unknowns, then measuring them with a ruler (markers give a leniency of +-10% I think).
Another way is to solve it using trigonometry.
 

eshaygabberbrah

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I can only advise you to do some engineering past paper questions involving calculations. Calculations are a major part of the examination and are easy to scab marks off, even if your final answer is wrong.

Make sure you can relate a question to a formula on the formula sheet on the back of the examination paper. Convert all of the given values into SI units (such a m, s, N, etc.) and solve for the unknown.
Convert the SI units to what the question may ask you if need be..

In regards to questions with angles, I think it's best to do them graphically, that is, drawing all the available forces to scale and in the correct angle. Then finding the unknowns by drawing to scale the direction of the force of the unknowns, then measuring them with a ruler (markers give a leniency of +-10% I think).
Another way is to solve it using trigonometry.
Cheers, thats good advice!
so you can just get horizontal & vertical components through trig then treat them the same as other forces? doesnt seem too hard i suppose :)
 

lemon1

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I found this website from another school (discovered where my teacher gets his resources). Down the bottom of the page is electronic copies of the TAFE modules of Engineering Studies. This should help with you last minute study :D Good luck for tomorrow! I really hope the exam is easy and that the drawing is basic :p

http://www.westfields-h.schools.nsw...ts/senior-study-electives/engineering-studies
thanks a lot! :)

I can only advise you to do some engineering past paper questions involving calculations. Calculations are a major part of the examination and are easy to scab marks off, even if your final answer is wrong.

Make sure you can relate a question to a formula on the formula sheet on the back of the examination paper. Convert all of the given values into SI units (such a m, s, N, etc.) and solve for the unknown.
Convert the SI units to what the question may ask you if need be..

In regards to questions with angles, I think it's best to do them graphically, that is, drawing all the available forces to scale and in the correct angle. Then finding the unknowns by drawing to scale the direction of the force of the unknowns, then measuring them with a ruler (markers give a leniency of +-10% I think).
Another way is to solve it using trigonometry.
No worries i do have the Excel book anyways, and thanks for the tips :)
 

5ybertr0n

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This discussion is ages ago, but is it possible for you to give me the site as well. Thank you!
 

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