This is the most GOATED mechanical engineering channel in existence. I love how your explanations are detailed yet simple. Keep up the good work buddy.
Awesome! I'm learning through this channel when i was in 2nd year of Engineering.i recommend to my fellows to boost up their concept with less boring lecture
Question. If you take a cross section with a vertical plane, you don't get a circle, but rather a kind of elipse shape, due to the spiral. In that case, isnt it more accurate to consider also normal and bending stresses?
Readiness! This video is not mine.i am not the person who is teaching here.I learnt about all these design procedures long ago in formal schooling.If anyone is watching this video with me, i am helping you to have the concepts of designing and mechanical functions of springs for a given component such as helical spring in high pressure relief valves which i was working on it 5 years ago.
Your videos are awesome and cover many aspects, but it's hard to concentrate with your monotone voice and the speed😅 I'm not criticising, I just wish you could improve it cause you're videos worth so much to me.....Good luck my friend🙏❤
A high school student's perspective: I blink for a second and there are a ton of symbols on the screen which I do not understand... lol I am not criticizing, but I feel the speed of the lecture could be a little less (maybe it's just that I am in highschool and therefore I am not grasping the concepts at the same level as someone in college/university).
Oh, don't worry. These are not even meant for college students that aren't taking the course. These are mostly to easily review what they are already going over in their own class in college; mostly what their instructor most of the time fails to convey properly. If you're in highschool and getting most of it tho, you're doing great and will most likely benefit from watching all of these, even if you're not taking the course yet.
This is the most GOATED mechanical engineering channel in existence. I love how your explanations are detailed yet simple. Keep up the good work buddy.
This was delivered at the perfect speed and detail level, such an excellent lecture!
The only video so far that explained how the torsional torque and direct shearing force derivation. Nice video!
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU SO MUCH I really needed this. I love the format. No bull, no hidden messages just the facts! KEep it up :)
Awesome!
I'm learning through this channel when i was in 2nd year of Engineering.i recommend to my fellows to boost up their concept with less boring lecture
Your logic is undeniable, great explenation
i wish i'd discover your channel earlier, these are the types of educational videos i'd watch all year round and not just two days before endsems XD
wow, what a perfect explanation, Thanks.
Thank You!
Question. If you take a cross section with a vertical plane, you don't get a circle, but rather a kind of elipse shape, due to the spiral. In that case, isnt it more accurate to consider also normal and bending stresses?
Thanks for Thai sub
Readiness!
This video is not mine.i am not the person who is teaching here.I learnt about all these design procedures long ago in formal schooling.If anyone is watching this video with me, i am helping you to have the concepts of designing and mechanical functions of springs for a given component such as helical spring in high pressure relief valves which i was working on it 5 years ago.
Io Mamu swalpa slow explain karo ba, shatabji train jaise chalthi
Your videos are awesome and cover many aspects, but it's hard to concentrate with your monotone voice and the speed😅 I'm not criticising, I just wish you could improve it cause you're videos worth so much to me.....Good luck my friend🙏❤
Thanks for the tips!
You can change the playback speed on your end. And that will change the "monotone" and speed simultaneously.
A high school student's perspective: I blink for a second and there are a ton of symbols on the screen which I do not understand... lol I am not criticizing, but I feel the speed of the lecture could be a little less (maybe it's just that I am in highschool and therefore I am not grasping the concepts at the same level as someone in college/university).
Oh, don't worry. These are not even meant for college students that aren't taking the course. These are mostly to easily review what they are already going over in their own class in college; mostly what their instructor most of the time fails to convey properly. If you're in highschool and getting most of it tho, you're doing great and will most likely benefit from watching all of these, even if you're not taking the course yet.
ok