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Formulas for Stress, Strain, and Structural Matrices [Hardcover]

Walter D. Pilkey (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Hardcover $166.17  
Hardcover, July 1994 --  
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Formulas for Stress, Strain, and Structural Matrices Formulas for Stress, Strain, and Structural Matrices 4.8 out of 5 stars (5)
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Book Description

July 1994 0471527467 978-0471527466 1
Formulas for Stress, Strain, and Structural Matrices Formulas for Stress, Strain, and Structural Matrices enables you to take full advantage of the efficiency and accuracy of computers for deformation and stress analysis. The formulas included give you powerful tools for static, stability, and dynamic analyses of beams, bars, plates, and shells with very general mechanical or thermal loading. Formulas are given for stresses, displacements, buckling loads, natural frequencies, and transient responses, beams, torsional systems, extension bars, frames, thin-walled beams, curved bars, rotors, plates, thick shells, and thin shells are included. Formulas for Stress, Strain, and Structural Matrices delivers key material not found in other books on the subject, such as mechanical properties and testing of engineering material, geometric, shear-related properties and stresses, responses of gridworks and thick shells, and fracture mechanics and fatigue. And you’ll find a further powerful tool in the tables of structural matrices given here, which allows you to develop your own computer program to solve special problems. A succinct source on the strength of material formulas, Formulas for Stress, Strain, and Structural Matrices will ease the task of analysis and provide new opportunities for design engineers, structural engineers, and stress analysts.

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Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

This is a reference source for strength of material formulas for the analysis and design of structural members and mechanical elements. Allows efficient static, stability and dynamic analyses of beams, bars, plates and shells with very general mechanical or thermal loading. The range of solutions includes arbitrary geometries and loadings.

From the Back Cover

Formulas for Stress, Strain, and Structural Matrices Formulas for Stress, Strain, and Structural Matrices enables you to take full advantage of the efficiency and accuracy of computers for deformation and stress analysis. The formulas included give you powerful tools for static, stability, and dynamic analyses of beams, bars, plates, and shells with very general mechanical or thermal loading. Formulas are given for stresses, displacements, buckling loads, natural frequencies, and transient responses, beams, torsional systems, extension bars, frames, thin-walled beams, curved bars, rotors, plates, thick shells, and thin shells are included. Formulas for Stress, Strain, and Structural Matrices delivers key material not found in other books on the subject, such as mechanical properties and testing of engineering material, geometric, shear-related properties and stresses, responses of gridworks and thick shells, and fracture mechanics and fatigue. And you’ll find a further powerful tool in the tables of structural matrices given here, which allows you to develop your own computer program to solve special problems. A succinct source on the strength of material formulas, Formulas for Stress, Strain, and Structural Matrices will ease the task of analysis and provide new opportunities for design engineers, structural engineers, and stress analysts.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 1488 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley-Interscience; 1 edition (July 1994)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0471527467
  • ISBN-13: 978-0471527466
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.6 x 2.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,829,963 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Roark's book raised to the power 3!, January 30, 2003
This review is from: Formulas for Stress, Strain, and Structural Matrices (Hardcover)
This is a first-class reference book, very well organized. As a practising structural engineer, I'm commonly confronted with strength of materials formulas for different kind of structural members and I do extensive FE modeling. It is interesting to have analytical formulas to check these calculations on some occasions.

Roark's formulas for stress and strain hadn't satisfied me: information is not oriented for structural engineers, introductory texts are not enough theoretical and you have US units throughout.

In Pilkey's book, you have the perfect structural engineer's reference: many chapters, with at first a list of notation, explanation of conventions, and then a short introductory course on the subject together with solved examples. After that, there it is: magnificent well-organized "tables", with all kind of data of prime interest to a structural engineer. As an example, I'll mention that you can find plastic section modulus for about 11 section types.

Units are mixed for examples, but for data you have always both US and SI units furnished.

For all entries, Pilkey's book is far more complete than the Roark's one. You'll be surprised by the vastness and depth of formulas furnished. Furthermore, you have structural matrices in each case if you want to do numerical programming.

The list of references is up to date and very extensive. It is a pricy book, but you'll not regret it!

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5.0 out of 5 stars Best Formula Book for Structural Engineers, December 10, 2011
This is the most complete compilation of formulas for structural engineering as far as I can tell, (the plates and shells sections are outstanding). However, I would not advise anyone to use this book alone, even for short calculations of simple elements I always look for a second and sometimes a third source of reference to confirm results. Even the best of books have typos, especially in regards to equations.

For some years now I have worked as a project manager, I don't have as much time to do as many structural calculations as I would like to any more. However in occasions I need to verify the results of other engineers or assess existing structures for a preliminary design. This book has up to now not let me down once in any of these calculations. I would definitely recommend it to any engineer versed in structural analysis.

Best regards,

Bryan
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5.0 out of 5 stars A Roark for Structural Engrs, June 8, 2011
I can't say enough about this book. However, you may hate this book just based on the fact that you'll end up throwing away a handful of your ol tried n trusty references after getting it. It is that comprehensive. I haven't opened my Roark's since I got it. Roark does a good job of providing info that's useful to mechanical and structural engineers, but this was obviously conceived from the get-go with structural engineering in mind (though its written by a mechanical engring professor).

I have no qualms stating that this is THE new reference text for non-material (steel, concrete, etc) structural engineering. Need a generic stiffness matrix for a tapered beam with spring supports? Got it. How about plates on elastic foundations, or do you need 100 pages of tabulated internal forces, deflections and dynamic properties of thin-shells of revolution? Got it.

You won't regret shelling out the cash for this one...
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
The notation used in the formulas is defined in each chapter. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
maximum octahedral shear stress, principal sectorial coordinate, uniform shaft element, lantern loading, gyroscopic matrices, whirl radius, circular plate element, effective stress concentration factor, sectorial moment, axially symmetric loading, equivalent shear area, polar mass moment, transfer matrix procedure, geometric stiffness matrices, whirl amplitude, contact ellipse, notch sensitivity index, shear center, transfer matrix solution, dynamic stiffness matrices, dynamic stiffness matrix, equivalent shear force, concentrated occurrences, theoretical stress concentration factor, geometric stiffness matrix
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, General Response Expressions, Edge Deformation, Internal Forces Deformations, Metals Handbook, Nonrectangular Single-Bay Frames, Tabulated Formulas, Advanced Mechanics of Materials, Description Critical Load, Case Frequency Parameter, Cross-Sectional Shape Torsional Stress Values, Boca Raton, Case Loading Vectors, Corona Publishing, Shape Torsional Constant, Thick Spherical Shells, Boundary Conditions Xi Mode Shapes, Column Research Committee of Japan, Critical Speeds of Simple Horizontal Rotors, Handbook of Structural Stability, Point Matrices of Cylinders, Shape Location of Shear Center, Society of Automotive Engineers, Sound Vibrat, Statically Indeterminate Rectangular Frames
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