Dynamics of Machine Course Help

AI Thread Summary
Resources for understanding dynamics in mechanical engineering, particularly vectors, are being sought by a third-year student struggling with foundational concepts. Recommendations include reviewing materials on Statics before tackling Dynamics to better grasp the relationships between position, velocity, and acceleration. Khan Academy is suggested as a helpful platform for brushing up on vector principles. Additionally, specific websites like Engineering Toolbox and SBA Invent are provided for further learning. The discussion emphasizes the importance of mastering vector addition and resultant calculations for success in Dynamics.
theitcrowd
Messages
16
Reaction score
0
Hi All,

I was wondering if anyone could post some videos or some websites where I can read about Dynamics required for Mechanical Engineering i.e. related to vectors , how to add vectors , how to find the resultant. I searched YouTube but I am not really getting any good responses.

I am a third year student and I don't really know Vectors that well and I find no way in my books to brush up on that, for e.g. I don't remember the parallelogram vector law and triangular one and its confusing me during class and I keep cursing my self for skipping that part in Physics when I was in school.

I hope you get the idea.

Thanks
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
Try Khan Academy
 
If your looking to brush up on vectors you should review Statics first since Dynamics will more likely confuse the situations since you also have to deal with how position relates to velocity, and how velocity relates to acceleration, instead of just dealing with direction.

Either way the easiest way to think of vectors is as a trig or geometry problem where you have so much force, velocity, acceleration going in the x, y, and z direction, where the magnitude of these properties would equal the following:

magnitude = sqrt (x2+y2+z2)

Anyways, some sites that might help with dynamics are the following.

http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/dynamics-t_60.html

http://sbainvent.com/dynamics/
 
Thanks for the help , really helped me out!

Cheers
 
Posted June 2024 - 15 years after starting this class. I have learned a whole lot. To get to the short course on making your stock car, late model, hobby stock E-mod handle, look at the index below. Read all posts on Roll Center, Jacking effect and Why does car drive straight to the wall when I gas it? Also read You really have two race cars. This will cover 90% of problems you have. Simply put, the car pushes going in and is loose coming out. You do not have enuff downforce on the right...
Thread 'Physics of Stretch: What pressure does a band apply on a cylinder?'
Scenario 1 (figure 1) A continuous loop of elastic material is stretched around two metal bars. The top bar is attached to a load cell that reads force. The lower bar can be moved downwards to stretch the elastic material. The lower bar is moved downwards until the two bars are 1190mm apart, stretching the elastic material. The bars are 5mm thick, so the total internal loop length is 1200mm (1190mm + 5mm + 5mm). At this level of stretch, the load cell reads 45N tensile force. Key numbers...
I'm trying to decide what size and type of galvanized steel I need for 2 cantilever extensions. The cantilever is 5 ft. The space between the two cantilever arms is a 17 ft Gap the center 7 ft of the 17 ft Gap we'll need to Bear approximately 17,000 lb spread evenly from the front of the cantilever to the back of the cantilever over 5 ft. I will put support beams across these cantilever arms to support the load evenly
Back
Top