Classical Alternative to Kleppner & kolenkow problems

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The discussion centers on finding supplementary resources for introductory mechanics problems that are less challenging than those in Kleppner and Kolenkow's "Introduction to Mechanics." Participants recommend starting with problems from Halliday/Resnick/Walker and Young/Freedman, as these texts provide a gradual transition to the more difficult problems in Kleppner. David Morin's "Classical Mechanics" is mentioned but criticized for its reliance on trickier problem-solving methods. Taylor's book is suggested as a potential resource, although some argue it is better suited for after mastering Kleppner. The conversation highlights the importance of a solid mathematical background in tackling physics problems and acknowledges varying experiences with different textbooks.
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Hey all,

I'm loving an Introduction to Mechanics, but I'm finding the problems in the book are quite hard. Is there another book I could do for intro problems?

I'd still like to do the problems in an introduction to mechanics, but I need some easier problems as a base
 
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The next step "down" from K&K is occupied by lots of calculus-based intro physics books: Halliday/Resnick/Walker, Young/Freedman, etc. Maybe also French's "Newtonian Mechanics", although I think that might be more like K&K.
 
Try doing the problems from Resnick and Halliday first. The difficult quotations m questions in this book will lead you to the harder ones in Kleppner more gradually.
 
Aniruddha@94 said:
Try doing the problems from Resnick and Halliday first. The difficult quotations m questions in this book will lead you to the harder ones in Kleppner more gradually.
Just the answer I was looking for. Thanks for the advice and hopefully I can get everything figured out. Klepner is hard but invigorating when you finally understand it.

Cheers!
 
I was never very good at Physics and found their problems quite inaccessible, even though I'm good at Maths. But, a similar source of problems is David Morin's book about Classical Mechanics. Check it out.
 
Maybe Try Taylors book? I liked how he beat the explanations to death.
 
Maths Absorber said:
I was never very good at Physics and found their problems quite inaccessible, even though I'm good at Maths. But, a similar source of problems is David Morin's book about Classical Mechanics. Check it out.

Morin's problems are annoying, and depend on trickery to solve more often than not. I doubt this will help him.

MidgetDwarf said:
Maybe Try Taylors book? I liked how he beat the explanations to death.

I wouldn't do that, Taylor is where you should go after K&K.
 
Student100 said:
Morin's problems are annoying, and depend on trickery to solve more often than not. I doubt this will help him.
I wouldn't do that, Taylor is where you should go after K&K.

I can see that. Maybe I found Taylor easier than K&K because I had the math background. I had already completed 3 semesters of Calculus , 2 books on Linear Algebra, Discrete Math, and completed Geometry by Moise. But I did like the extra explanations Taylor provided and I felt that K&K could have maybe explained some topics a bit more.

Upon pointing this out, I may retract my statement. I am a Math major and not a physics major. So excuse my bad suggestion OP.
 

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