Friday, June 17, 2016

Mechanical Design of Machine Components, Second Edition: SI Version by Ansel C. Ugural *eBooks Online Free »DOC

Mechanical Design of Machine Components, Second Edition: SI Version


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Mechanical Design of Machine Components, Second Edition: SI Version

Title:Mechanical Design of Machine Components, Second Edition: SI Version
Author:Ansel C. Ugural
Rating:4.89 (993 Votes)
Asin:1498735363
Format Type:Hardcover
Number of Pages:989 Pages
Publish Date:2016-06-14
Genre:

Analyze and Solve Real-World Machine Design Problems Using SI UnitsMechanical Design of Machine Components, Second Edition: SI Version strikes a balance between method and theory, and fills a void in the world of design. Relevant to mechanical and related engineering curricula, the book is useful in college classes, and also serves as a reference for practicing engineers. This book combines the needed engineering mechanics concepts, analysis of various machine elements, design procedures, and the application of numerical and computational tools. It demonstrates the means by which loads are resisted in mechanical components, solves all examples and problems within the book using SI units, and helps readers gain valuable insight into the mechanics and design methods of machine components. The author presents structured, worked examples and problem sets that showcase analysis and design techniques, includes case studies that present different asp

Editorial : "This is a well-written and organized book. It is suitable for use in the classroom; and, should prove to be a valuable aid to a design/analytical engineer."Richard E. Dippery, Kettering University, Flint, Michigan, USA

"A valuable textbook for students who are interested in applying basic mechanics of materials knowledge to real-world problems. … quite comprehensive."Yong Zhu, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, USA

At first, this biography on Damon Runyon seems like any other biography: a list of dates, names, people, and places. The author of this book, which purports from the title to dispel “the myth of the lone genius in the history of innovation”, fails miserably. Why is it relevant to the ‘no lone inventor’ thesis to mention that: (1) Tesla was a pool shark (and that he pretended not to know how to play pool so he could sucker people into playing him for money, so common in pool hustling that it doesn’t even raise eyebrows, but the author thought so), (2) Tesla goofed off in college and missed classes, (3) Tesla was probably gay, (4) Tesla was apparently a vegetarian, shunned contact with people, and was tall and underweight (reading this, and looking at the unflattering photos of a gaunt Tesla, you’d think he died young, but in fact –and back in the days when people died young-- Tesla lived to 87!), (5) Tesla had no kids (and is mocked by the autho

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