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Engineering books

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brents

Industrial
Dec 15, 2004
34
Forgive me for my elementary question, I get tired of being on the computer, as I rather read from a book.

On that note, Does anyone have some recomendations on some very good engineering books? I really would like to find a book that has a lot of information about thread strengths. Like screwing a cylinder in an end cap. I would like to know strengths of pullout forces. An example problem I would like answered would be, What major thread diameter and what threads per inch would be required for a given force? These are basic questions that have always haunted me..

Thanks,
brent
 
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Recommended for you

Machinery's Handbook from Industrial Press

Mechanical Engineering Design by Shigley and Mischke, from McGraw-Hill

Handbook of Bolts and Bolted Joints by Bickford and Nassar, from Dekker

VDI 2230 Systematic Calculation of high-duty bolted joints from Verein Deutscher Engenieure

Regards,

Cory

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Just generic engineering books- try Timoshenko's "History of the Strength of Materials", available from Dover books. You won't learn much of use, but it makes an interesting read.
 
If I had to pick just one book, my choice is Marks' Handbook. It may not directly answer your thread question but it will answer many others!
 
Kreyszig "Advanced Engineering Mathematics"

Everything else is just implementation and details

!


Cheers

Greg Locock

Please see FAQ731-376 for tips on how to make the best use of Eng-Tips.
 
I got lot of answers for the threads, loadind strength from

Machinary's Handbook.
Its got lot of important engineering information.
 
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