Alright, in a year or two I'll be done with my Mech Eng uni, but I know next to nothing about engineering, so I have decided I'm going to have to self study. I have just finished Calc 2 on my own (prof. Leonard), and heading to Calc 3 and diff. equations soon. My physics knowledge is algebra based, but I plan on studying physics properly once I'm done with Calc 3. I'm not a physics student and never will be, so I'd like to know physics at a university level, but not on a physics student level. Basically, high school physics with calculus. Any good video lectures on that, that cover the fundamentals, or maybe a book that's not a 1000 pages long? Either way, I found this guy on YT called AK lectures and he seems to have covered all of physics at a calc level.
One thing I'd like advice with is, what should my mechanical engineering curriculum look like, books- or lectures-wise? Let's presume I know next to nothing, what are the absolute fundamentals a mechanical engineer should have command over? Starting with a good book or lecture on engineering drawing, strength of materials etc.
One thing I'd like advice with is, what should my mechanical engineering curriculum look like, books- or lectures-wise? Let's presume I know next to nothing, what are the absolute fundamentals a mechanical engineer should have command over? Starting with a good book or lecture on engineering drawing, strength of materials etc.
