Mechanical Engineering
Mechanical engineers design and develop everything you think of as a machine - from supersonic
fighter jets to bicycles to toasters. And they influence the design of other products as well - shoes, light bulbs and even doors.
Many mechanical engineers specialize in areas such as manufacturing, robotics, automotive/transportation and air conditioning. Others
cross over into other disciplines, working on everything from artificial organs to the expanding field of nanotechnology. And some use
their mechanical engineering degree as preparation for the practice of medicine and law. The mechanical engineer may design a component,
a machine, a system or a process. Mechanical engineers will analyze their design using the principles of motion, energy, and force to
insure the product functions safely, efficiently, reliably, and can be manufactured at a competitive cost.
Mechanical engineers work in the automotive, aerospace, chemical, computer, communication, paper, and power
generation industries. Mechanical engineers will be found in virtually any manufacturing industry. Increasingly, mechanical engineers
are needed in the environmental and bio-medical fields. Indeed virtually every product or service in modern life has probably been
touched in some way by a mechanical engineer.
Gallery
Some Issues
- ASME MAGAZINE
- ASME News online
- Journal of Mechanical Engineering
- Mechanical Engineering Yahoo! Directory
Course Items
- How Bourdon Tube Pressure Gauge Works
- ME 268 (EEE) Model Lab Lecture
- ME267_Steam Turbine
- ME260_Thread Drawing
- ME260_Gear Drawing
- ME267_VAPOR POWER CYCLES
- Gas Cycles - Part I_ME 267
- Gas Cycles - Part II_ME 267
- Refrigeration Cycle_ME 267
- pumps and Turbine_ME 267
- HEAT_ME 267
- ME 160 Presentation
- ME241 Class Test MARKS
- ASSIGNMENT_ME 241
Links
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