Books mentioned in the video: Book 1 - Data Book for Civil Engineers geni.us/dpGEQt Book 2 - Steel Designers' Handbook geni.us/T2bK Book 3 - Reinforced Concrete Basics geni.us/6MsC8 Book 4 - Reinforced Concrete Basics geni.us/6MsC8 Book 5 - Time-Dependent Behaviour of Concrete Structures geni.us/dlJJ9 Book 6 - Roark's Formulas for Stress and Strain geni.us/W4KP Book 7 - Computational Engineering www.istructe.org/resources/guidance/computational-engineering/ 🔩 Mola Engineering Kit: molamodel.com/?ref=brendanhasty. Use code:brendanhasty to get 10% off on checkout
Happy new year Brendan, That was a solid list of recommended books. The steuctural engineers's pocket book by Fiona Cobb is another book to have. Stay safe Malik from Barbados.
If I was to add to this list it would be: Structural Analysis: A Unified Classical and Matrix Approach (Ghali, Neville, Brown). Excellent for understanding how your FEA models work and for all sorts of more complex analyses represented in a way that they're readily input into your computer to solve. Some other honourable mentions: 1. Structural Engineer's Pocket Book (Cobb). Eurocode and UK /Ireland based primarily but when I worked in Aus everyone had one. 2. Reinforced Concrete Design: To Eurocode 2 (Mosley, Bungey, Hulse). Again Eurocode based.
Structural engineering is a sub discipline of mechanical engineering. Some of the books that mechanical engineers are good to read. Today’s a lot of structural works are done by mechanical engineering.
Nah, there is no concrete, timber, or steel structures design in "mechanical structural engineering." Structural engineering is, in fact, by definition, a sub-discipline of civil engineering ... the structural mechanics might be similar but definitely not the structural design. Hence, mechanical engineers can't do structural works unless you are talking about M&E
@@svoids I think we didn't learn enough from what is/was beautiful and still stands. We seem to be very busy building ugly, moldy structures that don't last long.
Books mentioned in the video:
Book 1 - Data Book for Civil Engineers geni.us/dpGEQt
Book 2 - Steel Designers' Handbook geni.us/T2bK
Book 3 - Reinforced Concrete Basics geni.us/6MsC8
Book 4 - Reinforced Concrete Basics geni.us/6MsC8
Book 5 - Time-Dependent Behaviour of Concrete Structures geni.us/dlJJ9
Book 6 - Roark's Formulas for Stress and Strain geni.us/W4KP
Book 7 - Computational Engineering www.istructe.org/resources/guidance/computational-engineering/
🔩 Mola Engineering Kit: molamodel.com/?ref=brendanhasty. Use code:brendanhasty to get 10% off on checkout
Happy new year Brendan,
That was a solid list of recommended books. The steuctural engineers's pocket book by Fiona Cobb is another book to have.
Stay safe
Malik from Barbados.
Thanks Brandon, Lonnie pack is also good - good handbook
If I was to add to this list it would be:
Structural Analysis: A Unified Classical and Matrix Approach (Ghali, Neville, Brown). Excellent for understanding how your FEA models work and for all sorts of more complex analyses represented in a way that they're readily input into your computer to solve.
Some other honourable mentions:
1. Structural Engineer's Pocket Book (Cobb). Eurocode and UK /Ireland based primarily but when I worked in Aus everyone had one.
2. Reinforced Concrete Design: To Eurocode 2 (Mosley, Bungey, Hulse). Again Eurocode based.
Thanks for the recommendation
Solid list! As practising Aus Engineer - can't agree more! Thanks Brendan
Thanks for the support
great recommendations Brendan!
What about the PT design. especially for the fundamentals and examples.?
Brendan. Please Add the references that would get Architects to learn engineering basics and understand Measures, eg a 200mm slab cannot span, 10m.
sweet, i own 5/7 of these😃
Structural engineering is a sub discipline of mechanical engineering. Some of the books that mechanical engineers are good to read. Today’s a lot of structural works are done by mechanical engineering.
Nah, there is no concrete, timber, or steel structures design in "mechanical structural engineering." Structural engineering is, in fact, by definition, a sub-discipline of civil engineering ... the structural mechanics might be similar but definitely not the structural design. Hence, mechanical engineers can't do structural works unless you are talking about M&E
Good to know. On the other hand, the romans built very well without all of this.
Survivorship bias, trial and error. Buildings we design today are almost guaranteed to withstand all loads.
@@svoids For how long?
@@drgyt2469 depends on your design working life.Remember, there were as many historical structures as we have today. Most are reduced to dust.
@@drgyt2469 also, seismic design philosophy did not exist back then and collesium collapsed and was remediated
@@svoids I think we didn't learn enough from what is/was beautiful and still stands. We seem to be very busy building ugly, moldy structures that don't last long.