Thursday, August 16, 2007

Engineering Mechanics: Statics by By J. L. Meriam, L. G. Kraige

I'm so greatful to hear that this book will be thought in HU. Click on the below links to download the whole book. I try to find it's solution manual as soon as I got rid of my lessons! Enjoy...




Password: marwansinan and waseemthaer


Book Description

This concise and authoritative book emphasizes basic principles and problem formulation. It illustrates both the cohesiveness of the relatively few fundamental ideas in this area and the great variety of problems these ideas solve. All of the problems address principles and procedures inherent in the design and analysis of engineering structures and mechanical systems, with many of the problems referring explicitly to design considerations.
Engineering mechanics by Meriam and Kraige provides an excellent treatment of the subject matter, providing that one has all the necessary tools to handle this course. This means to have your geometry, algebra, trig., physics, and calculus internally wired. If not, one has to do the deep reviews, spending time and energy at grasping the basic concepts.
Also, if the discussion of the theory seems thin and problem sets seem unrepresentative, might I suggest another statics book by Riley and Sturges, 2nd ed. The exposition is expanded and provides clarity, the problem sets are a bit on the bland side, but the example sets provide reasonable representation to the problems in the book.
But, of all the problem sets of all statics books I have seen, Meriam and Kraige has the most realistic graphics and real world stuff. If you can internalize this book, your other mechanics courses like mech. of materials, dynamics, and fluids will move much more smoothly.
And, if a problem in the text appears impossible, it is always because of a misunderstanding of simpler concepts. It doesn’t hurt being creative when problem solving. That is, to make additional sketches, draw diagrams, to QUESTION each and every part of the problem. To break apart or separate the problem into components and then mentally observing the parts under a “magnifying glass.”
This book is very challenging, and it definitely helps if you have an instructor who has energy to be able to MAKE CLEAR any concepts whether in class, through paper handouts, in person, or even through email. If your instructor is lazy, you know where most of the energy of effort will have to come from.
Finally, if you has the drive, you can succeed. If your tank is low on gas, head for your next review station. Don’t let any misunderstandings linger in your mind, siphoning your confidence, time, and energy. Sometimes, you gotta hike a mountain, going from review to review. You can do it.

By J. L. Meriam, L. G. Kraige, Publisher: Wiley Number Of Pages: 512 Publication Date: 2001-08-28 Sales Rank: 453776 ISBN / ASIN: 0471406465 Binding: Hardcover Manufacturer: Wiley Studio: Wiley

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

dead link
-anony

Engineering Mechanics Statics said...

This text is considered a classic on this topic. This subject is very basic, yet very important for nearly all engineering students.