mechanism problem

Discussion in 'Pro/Engineer & Creo Elements/Pro' started by jiten, Sep 9, 2006.

  1. jiten

    jiten Guest

    hi !
    i am jitendra saini final yr student of me. engg. plz
    tell me full form of PRO/ENGINEER.
    I want to rotate wheel on tha railway track. (just like

    railway wheels )
    which conection i have to make and wheather i
    have to put any motor or any force.
    bi!
     
    jiten, Sep 9, 2006
    #1
  2. jiten

    David Janes Guest

    Does "full form of Pro/Engineer" translate into American?
    Umm hmm, you push the earth backwards and the train forwards: inertial mass
    of earth wins out over that of train, so train goes forward, umm hmm, I get
    it.
    Well, you asked about "connection" and in the subject, you mentioned
    Mechanism, so you're looking in the right place. What do you think is the
    right kind of connection? I'd say it's the "pin" type: you are trying to
    eliminate degrees of freedom while still allowing the wheel to turn (axial
    connection), but not slide side to slide (planar connection) and that is the
    definition of the pin connection.

    Nothing goes without definition of what's driving the movement; of course
    you need to define a MOTOR, or rather, the properties of motion. And you
    create this on your pin connection. Aren't they teaching you ANYTHING at
    that place where you're getting your degree? They ought to be teaching you
    the software. Do they think that the first company they dump you on is going
    to teach you!?! Unh unh, that company's gonna want you to walk in the door
    knowing something useful ~ at very least, the software. Plus, how to make
    things.

    Good luck, bro! I'd be shittin' my pants by now, I was you. You're a Senior?
    Really?!?!? ****, man, you are SO screwed.... And you are just NOW leaning
    Mechanisms!?! Damn, just go on to get your Masters!!!

    David Janes
     
    David Janes, Sep 9, 2006
    #2
  3. jiten

    ms Guest

    I think the west is safe from the onslaught of "well-trained" Indian
    engineers for at least a few more years ;-)
     
    ms, Sep 12, 2006
    #3
  4. jiten

    David Janes Guest

    Scary thought, but, yeah. I never guessed that there'd be some statistical
    inevitability, in a country that size, of the existence of a Doofus U. Maybe
    jitendrasaini will let us in on what second rate organization is giving him
    such a third rate education. I'd honestly be surprised if he (I'm assuming)
    were in India. Maybe "he"'s here already and going to an American
    university.

    Anyway, the question is too broad, too general, too unfocused to be dealt
    with in detail, that is, without writing a book. Which I'm not doing without
    a $25000 advance.

    How far'd you get, jitendra? figure out what a connection is? what kind of a
    connection would be good to make a wheel? what did you learn, where'd you
    get stuck, what did you try, what worked, what didn't? You gotta contribute
    something to this discussion besides/beyond that illiterate drivel you
    started with. (BTW, is it true that engineering majors score high on the
    math/science portion of the SATs and low on the language/communicaton
    competency portion? If true, could that have something to do with our
    difficulty here?) Jitendra, you may have an "out" yet, though, in truth, you
    expect better of your tutors here.

    David Janes
     
    David Janes, Sep 13, 2006
    #4
  5. Sorry ms, your tongue is showing.

    Just shows how scared deep inside you are of Indians. The sarcasm is
    just a mask :). We Indians are not bothered. Amen!

    - Sanjay Kulkarni (India).
     
    SanganakSakha, Sep 14, 2006
    #5
  6. jiten

    ms Guest

    I'm not afraid of Indians. Pakistanis maybe--they're a little more
    free-wheeling with their nukes.

    I was just making an observation. On this and many other Usenet groups, chat
    boards, and Internet sites one finds many Indian "engineers" or engineering
    students in their final year at the university who ask the most basic
    questions. It really is astounding to me that they have such a lack of
    understanding of the fundamentals of engineering and they go to the Internet
    expecting others to solve their problems. If you go to www.embedded.com and
    read Jack Ganssle's article, your eyes may be opened to the relatively
    unsophisticated state of engineering education in that part of the world.
    Take it how you will.
    http://www.embedded.com/showArticle...HNDLFWQSNDLRCKH0CJUNN2JVN?articleID=192700673
     
    ms, Sep 15, 2006
    #6
  7. jiten

    David Janes Guest

    Careful on this: since the standard for "freewheeling" ought to be the
    extreme, it is worth pointing out that neither country has used a nuke. It
    is also worth remembering that we live in the only contry that has.
    Interesting article, thanks for suggesting we read it. However, it says
    NOTHING about the state of engineering education in India. It says only
    this: 1) The training of Indian engineeris hasn't kept up with the expanding
    economy; 2) as a result, they're looking abroad for help, including in the
    US; 3) we should be doing more, here, to be competetive, including improving
    engineering education. This doesn't really sound like whatever point you
    were making, ms, which was what, exactly? That we don't have to worry about
    training people here because we're sending the manufacturing abroad? That we
    don't even have to worry about training engineers here because we're sending
    design/engineering abroad, as well, to keep it close to the manufacturing?

    David Janes
     
    David Janes, Sep 17, 2006
    #7
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