Continuing in the spirit of its successful previous editions, the tenth edition of Beer, Johnston, Mazurek, and Cornwell's Vector Mechanics for Engineers provides conceptually accurate and thorough coverage together with a significant refreshment of the exercise sets and online delivery of homework problems to your students. Nearly forty percent of the problems in the text are changed from the previous edition. The Beer/Johnston textbooks introduced significant pedagogical innovations into engineering mechanics teaching. The consistent, accurate problem-solving methodology gives your students the best opportunity to learn statics and dynamics. At the same time, the careful presentation of content, unmatched levels of accuracy, and attention to detail have made these texts the standard for excellence.
Ferdinand Pierre Beer (1915–2003) was a French mechanical engineer and university professor. He spent most of his career as a member of the faculty at Lehigh University, where he served as the chairman of the mechanics and mechanical engineering departments. His most significant contribution was the co-authorship of several textbooks in the field of mechanics, which have been widely cited and utilized in engineering education.
This might possibly be someones textbook, and perhaps if I had to study it I wouldn't rate it so highly, yet as a tool on the farm where I'm constantly fixing or building equipment, having a handy reference for all things to do with forces and stress is very handy. I likwe that this book has so many cool pictures of the forces at work.. I can often just bypass doing the math and go by dead reackoning as long as I have a good idea of the vectors involved!
While the statics book isn't that hard to understand because the topic is easy by itself, the book makes some things kinda hard with bad mathematical and written explanations, there are too many things that this book just pass away making the students think by themselves too much. By the way this isnt a big issue since some topics are understandable with the examples and there are some good explained things, but there's nothing of the other world here, others authors books are easier.
I read the fourth edition, which combined statics and dynamics all neatly packed into 926 pages! Statics was phenomenal and I soaked up an amazing amount that quarter. Dynamics, not so much. Maybe because the topics is more challenging than Statics. Good job Beer & Johnston (E. Russell Johnston, Jr. - co-author).
One of the most known sources of statics, and it has to be; P. Beer & E. Russell knew how to present and train a student in statics perfectly... good points and fairly hard questions in this book made me give it 4 stars. One less cause it causes you check answers to solve questions, IDK why! But that was a truth in our university😂 At last, appreciate it🙏
Vector Mechanics for Engineers: Statics by beer and johnston is simply put the worst book i have ever read
advanced calculus is really much much easier than this book and not because the materiel is hard, but because the writers have the amazing ability to turn a simple straightforward idea into an incoherent mess. at some points i would just skip the explanations, because they just make it harder to understand the basic ideas.
the authors also seem to ignore common mathematical notations and instead of keeping in line with common practices form linear algebra and calculus ,invent their own, making the formulas a mathematical mess
and the problem set couldn't be more annoying the first half of the book you are nothing more than a human vector calculator. most of the parameters are given with 3 decimal points, why???? i can understand the ideas just fine ,even if the problems are given in integers ,why make the problems unnecessarily complex.