I came here for a-levels and left with an engineering degree
@emanuelnolasco37454 сағат бұрын
This video is amazing!!! I just already read all the Standard ASME Y14.5 2018 and this video cover all the elemental and fundamental concepts. It is really help if you are reading the standard and get some doubts this video will clear it
@user-rq7kv3xi8u5 сағат бұрын
What is centeroid axies mean?
@teamahabhouna546411 сағат бұрын
It's very very obvious that this video is here because of your hard work.
@EnnaieL13 сағат бұрын
Thank you for your videos. As an engineer I appreciate your work on these videos because their very educational and informative. I gain a lot of knowledge because of videos and it makes young people to be engineers. Cheers for you!
@AngryGaper16 сағат бұрын
Does anybody here well versed in bolt specification, specifically through the use in FEA have any recommended courses out there?
@GameOver._.16 сағат бұрын
Your videos just plastered a solid path for my mechanical engineering exams in a few months
@ibrahimdeniz7308Күн бұрын
Guys... "nut factor", "nut" he he
@hamsinideshmukhКүн бұрын
bro you are lit!!! love youuuuuu
@shanelamontagne7334Күн бұрын
Excellent work! Cannot be beat!!
@enneyslife1074Күн бұрын
Nice
@mr.almezeini647Күн бұрын
0:50 that's what she said
@maguedoudasamiabelhaddad2183Күн бұрын
Amazing video! for someone who has no idea about materials and moving to the field, this is brilliant and helpful!
@simlowsbКүн бұрын
I LOVE YOUR VIDEO BRO!!!.... Thank you for sharing
@stanislemovsky5590Күн бұрын
So how much of the upward force is created by the pressure difference, and how much by the air deflected downwards? Would the pressure difference be enough to lift the mass of the aircraft, or is the deflected air necessary to achieve a sufficient force?
@CaesarBroКүн бұрын
I had a poorly packaged pipe shipped to me crack from either reaching tensile strength, cycle fatigue, or both because it wasn’t strapped down and it was fully constrained at one end. So while riding on the truck it freely bounced up and down, like a spring until failure. Now I’m writing the FMEA report. Calculations showed it may have reached plastic deformation elsewhere if tensile strength was reached, let alone ultimate strength. Now have to measure crack size for comparison. Thank you for the useful review!
@marekgruchoa5254Күн бұрын
6:01 - 6:39 Nie rozumiem, ponieważ powietrze powinno pokonywać górną i dolną część skrzydła w tym samym czasie, więc czemu animacja pokazuje co innego?
@SirWithrow2 күн бұрын
The nut factor
@kapitanhedwig46082 күн бұрын
Bolted Joints are much more than a trade-off between reassembly and strength of welded components. Unless for engineering, what needed is what counts, not what might be possible.
@LaraCroft-nh9sw2 күн бұрын
An overexplanation of "keep bolts tight boys"
@Jack-cc6sf2 күн бұрын
2nd year condensed matter physics summarised
@Victorsvolkswagens2 күн бұрын
What i think is insane the arp rod bolts for my engine are designed to run at 220 THOUSAND PSI!! Its an 8mm bolt which is just insane to think about
@kuldeeptripathi79692 күн бұрын
Amazing video
@PeePeePooPoo072 күн бұрын
fuck, that was hot
@AnhHoang-qb8ti3 күн бұрын
I recently subcribed to your Nebula, cause the animations are good, what did you use to animate your video?
@TheEfficientEngineer2 күн бұрын
Blender!
@kimbalcalkins69033 күн бұрын
how do temperature swings, like on a bridge between hot and cold effect design
@army62b3 күн бұрын
Your shear and especially double shear diagrams blend in with the background
@benoit-pierredemaine38243 күн бұрын
I would love to see similar episodes about washers ...
@BB-gr9hq3 күн бұрын
Here is a fun fact to know and tell. If you take a strain gauge, and wire it to a capacitor bank, and then, after charging the capacitor bank, you dump this current onto the strain gauge, the strain gauge behaves like an exploding bridge wire detonator (EBWD).
@frenzesleicorbeta29153 күн бұрын
Nebula isn't free
@MuhammadQasim-th3ed3 күн бұрын
Brilliant explanation brother... Continue this holy work 👍👍💛 ...
@rickjames59983 күн бұрын
this video really did not help my insomnia
@dabraz4 күн бұрын
Bernoulli principle: 😐👍
@wetrucken16894 күн бұрын
Welding is 100% sheer riveting is 90% sheer strength for bolts are measured in material used to materials fastening!!! And this is why bolts are used welding to a material that is 70% means there is a 60% failure rate!!! You have to take consideration of size height and type of Steel and where you needed to be the hardest and where you needed to be tolerant🎉 and you have to love the world and the science around it😂
@wetrucken16894 күн бұрын
Thank you Archimedes Archytas Tarentum for inventing the screw thousands of years ago and thank you Socrates for making jokes about the screw!!!× Greece BC 😂
@dvoiceotruth4 күн бұрын
Any EE in here?
@Abdo-yt5or4 күн бұрын
ينعل ابو الاستريس
@user-co7ty7jd9u4 күн бұрын
물방울
@johnpope89495 күн бұрын
My man just made nuts and bolts interesting. Your presentation of fasteners was fascinating.
@pandakso33655 күн бұрын
Take a drink everytime he says "oscillation." Seriously though, awesome video
@DrAmpedRider5 күн бұрын
Great video. The only improvement I would make is to have the bolt in tension break at the thread stress concentration rather than in the middle. This is worth sharing with my students.
@arestes5 күн бұрын
I've also seen in textbooks that there is another requirement: that the flow be irrotational (note that being laminar and steady doesn't imply irrotational, there are rotational, laminar and steady flows). However, this isn't mentioned here at minute 11:00, and I also fail to understand why it's needed for Bernoulli's equation to hold, other than it being intuitively “bad”. Anyone knows why it's really needed for this equation, or maybe I'm wrong and it's not?
@peterpan02015 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@user-xw2vu7dc2t5 күн бұрын
Thanks am getting the concept do one example
@paulconrod45045 күн бұрын
When I was drawing the views were,,,,,Plan,,,,Elevation,,,End Elevation!!!! When did it get "dumbed down" to top , front and left????
@ziranduan5 күн бұрын
Very Clear!
@user-jf7uc7dw7o6 күн бұрын
우주를 수학化 한 과학자분들.
@R0geR0sv0ld6 күн бұрын
In entertainment, we used bolted connections constantly - especially aluminum truss assembled with 4 @ 3/4" grade 8 steel nuts and bolts with flat washers under each contact surface. These connections are made with a simple ratchet and socket on each end - and are often undone 14 hours later to move the concert to the next town. Over-torque is a major concern; under-torque is also a problem especially as the truss structure is subjected to assorted loads during performance - articulating (moving) truss during the show, side loads due to pyrotechnic or gas effect bursts (such as CO2 sprays), vibrations from moving lights, and others. Since we are indoors, we ignore harmonics due to wind. BUT we are sensitive to possible impact of audio on truss and bolted connections. Are there any studies of the effects of loud noise (100dB sustained, especially in the low bass ranges that can shake catwalks and the cement floor of an arena concourse)?
@ismaeelhercules6 күн бұрын
what if when analysing your truss it has forces acting as a UDL and when converting it to a point load it falls n the middle of a member? how do you get loads like that at the joints of your members instead?