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Standard Handbook of Machine Design [Hardcover]

Joseph Shigley (Author), Charles Mischke (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Hardcover, June 1, 1996 --  
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There is a newer edition of this item:
Standard Handbook of Machine Design Standard Handbook of Machine Design 4.0 out of 5 stars (4)
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Book Description

0070569584 978-0070569584 June 1, 1996 2
The latest ideas in machine analysis and design have led to a major revision of the field's leading handbook. New chapters cover ergonomics, safety, and computer-aided design, with revised information on numerical methods, belt devices, statistics, standards, and codes and regulations.
Key features include:
*new material on ergonomics, safety, and computer-aided design;
*practical reference data that helps machines designers solve common problems--with a minimum of theory.
*current CAS/CAM applications, other machine computational aids, and robotic applications in machine design.
This definitive machine design handbook for product designers, project engineers, design engineers, and manufacturing engineers covers every aspect of machine construction and operations. Voluminous and heavily illustrated, it discusses standards, codes and regulations; wear; solid materials, seals; flywheels; power screws; threaded fasteners; springs; lubrication; gaskets; coupling; belt drive; gears; shafting; vibration and control; linkage; and corrosion.


Editorial Reviews

From the Back Cover

The source for modern machine design essentials IStandard Handbook of MACHINE DESIGN, Second Edition For more than a decade, amchine designers have relied on this definitive handbook for fast, accurate answers to virtually all their design questions. Now revised, updated, and expanded to reflect important technological developments, the second edition remains the ultimate reference on every aspect of modern machine design. Written in clear, simple language, using hundreds of worked-out problems and numerical examples, the Handbook provides the most practical, up-to-date information available on both basic design considerations and the design of specific machine elements. From current standards and codes to the latest CAD and computational methods, this edition includes everything needed to take a design project through to its successful completion. The Handbook contains 50 sections, each written by a top international expert, covering such vital topics as: Computational Considerations; Wear; Strength of Steels; Seals; Fasteners; Joints; Springs; Lubrication; Bearings; Drives; Gears and Gearing; Vibration and Control; Cam Mechanisms; Linkages; Gear Trains; Stress; and much more. In addition, all-new and rewritten chapters on usability, safety, minimizing engineering effort, statistical considerations, power screws, chain drives, and shafts are included. Packed with quick-reference formulas, tables, charts, and graphs, this master resource belongs at the workstation of every design engineer, product designer, and manager who has to make crucial decisions affecting the outcome of a project.

About the Author

Joseph Shigley (deceased), who taught at the University of Michigan, passed away in 1994.

Charles Mischke (Ames, IA) is a Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Iowa State University.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 1700 pages
  • Publisher: McGraw-Hill Professional; 2 edition (June 1, 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0070569584
  • ISBN-13: 978-0070569584
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.5 x 2.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4.5 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #609,653 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Reference for a Machine Designer, February 25, 2000
By 
This review is from: Standard Handbook of Machine Design (Hardcover)
This text is an excellent reference for any design engineer working in the machinery field. It fills in where the Machinery's Handbook falls short. The text is basically (I am oversimplifying) an expanded version of the Shigley McGraw-Hill Machine Design Textbook. My only complaint is that the discussion on the strength of welded joints is missing.
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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars thorough and outdated, November 11, 2000
By 
Luis Carlos Alvarez (Santo Domingo, D.R.) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Standard Handbook of Machine Design (Hardcover)
I own both Shigley's books on Machine Design, Mechanical Engineering Design (which I would rate 5/5) and this handbook. I find this handbook is very extensive in the topics it covers, just about everything pertaining to Machine Design, but fails to elaborate in many of the key areas. Furthermore, many formulas are presented, but there are not enough examples on their use. My greatest complaint though, has to do with the print, it seems as if I had in my hand a book written out in the 60s. Drawing are dirty and unclear in many situations, tables seem as if they were cutout from another book and pasted here, then photocopied (the first drawing in the book, a man, seems as if it was photocopied on a lousy photocopier from an old newspaper), and the typeface in the graphs is plainly outdated. I understand late J. Shigley is no longer among us, but Mischke should modernize the quality of presentation when deciding to launch new editions. Overall, I recommend Rothbart's handbook over this one.
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6 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Useful reference, December 7, 2004
By 
Standard Handbook of Machine Design, 3rd Edition edited by Joseph Shigley, Charles Mischke, Thomas H. Brown (Standard Handbook of Machine Design: McGraw-Hill Professional) The definitive machine design handbook for mechanical engineers, product designers, project engineers, design engineers, and manufacturing engineers covers every aspect of machine construction and operation. The 3rd edition of the Standard Handbook of Machine Design will be redesigned to meet the challenges of a new mechanical engineering age. In addition to adding chapters on structural plastics and adhesives, which are replacing the old nuts bolts and fasteners in design, the author will also update and streamline the remaining chapters.
Excerpt: This Third Edition of the Standard Handbook of Machine Design has been completely reorganized as compared to its two previous editions. To bring into focus the needs of the machine design engineer, without the distractions of ancillary material, the number of chapters has been reduced from 50 in the Second Edition to 39. These 39 chapters have been carefully grouped into nine distinct sections, denoted as Parts 1 through 9. These chapter groupings were inspired primarily by a set of eight "Machine Design Workbooks," containing much of the material in the First Edition, and published between the First and Second Editions.
After a new introductory chapter, "Evolution of a Successful Design," the first of nine sections, Part 1, "Machine Elements in Motion," presents four chapters on the seemingly endless ways to achieve a desired motion. Kinematics, or the geometry of motion, is probably the most important step in the design process, as it sets the stage for many of the other decisions that will be made as a successful design evolves. Whether it's a self-locking latch you are looking for, a complex cam shape, or an entire gear assembly, the information you need is here in these chapters.
Part 2, "Machine Elements that Absorb and Store Energy," contains three chapters presenting the classic machine elements: springs, flywheels, clutches, and brakes. Not all designs will have a need for these energy-related devices, but, when appropriate, no other device will do the job.
Part 3, "Gearing," contains five chapters covering every possible gear type, from basic spur gears to complex hypoid bevel gears sets; the intricacies of worm gearing; and the very versatile and relatively modern power screw designs.
Part 4, "Power Transmission," contains four chapters directed at the requirements of transferring motion from one rotating axis to another, whether by time-honored belt or chain configurations, or the wide variety of couplings used to isolate and protect downstream machine elements. This is also where the design of shafts, from both a static and dynamic viewpoint, is included.
Part 5, "Bearings and Lubrication," pulls together in one place the design of many types of roller bearings as well as the design aspects of the classic journal bearing. Bearings could not do their job without lubrication, and lubrication would be lost from most bearings without the proper seals. Traditional and nontraditional designs are presented.
Part 6, "Fastening, Joining, and Connecting," covers every conceivable type of mechanical fastener. When disassembly is not required, or when maximum strength is needed, then the only solution is a welded connection. All aspects of a welded connection are presented. Many connections must prevent leakage or provide cushioning, so a discussion of seals and their effect on a bolted connection is provided. The mating of parts without prior preassembly can be an important design requirement; therefore, this is where a detailed discussion of fits and tolerances is included.
Part 7, "Load Capability Considerations," provides the designer with the rules for determining if a particular part will fail. This determination does not have to be a precise calculation, either under static or dynamic conditions, whether the part is acting as a beam or column, but to ignore these fundamental principles is to invite
disaster. This section seemed like the best place to discuss vibration and, just as important, its control.
Part 8, "Performance of Engineering Materials," brings to bear the science of material behavior, to include the changes that take place during the manufacturing process. Once in service, machine elements are subject to constant wear and the adverse effects of corrosion.
Lastly, Part 9, "Classical Stress and Deformation Analysis," provides the design engineer with the fundamental formulas for stress, deflection, and deformation, and includes special geometries such as curved elements and special loadings, which are found in cylinders under internal pressure when parts are press fitted.
One of the chapters included in the First and Second Editions, "Sections and Shapes-Tabular Data," has been provided in this Third Edition as an appendix.
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First Sentence:
Most likely you have, right at this moment, at least one machine design project in progress. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
average pressure angle, surface ultimate strength, exc appearance, nonmetallic gasket materials, glass reinf, engineering steel chains, yld str, effective friction radius, face width contact, target preload, ith contact point, offset sidebar chains, worm pitch diameter, bending stress number, mean cone distance, partial journal bearings, wear elongation, hydrostatic end force, little weight change, sprocket diameters, operating pitch diameter, power transmission capacity, matching weld metal, total case depth, generating gear
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Associated Spring, The Lincoln Electric Company, John Wiley, Kure Beach, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Ann Arbor, Pitman Publishing Ltd, Mechanical Engineering Design, Third Edition, Book Company, Diamond Chain Company, Metals Park, Product Engineering, American Chain Association, American Gear Manufacturer's Association, Flame Head, Gleason Machine Division, Joseph Shigley, American Welding Society, Corrosion Engineering, Den Hartog, Elements of Mechanical Analysis, Front Ref, Iowa State University Press
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