You may know that I am constantly on the watch for good content on Mechanical Engineering, recognizing that a Mechanical Engineering is
required for the inf0.
I bumped into a truly informative article that walks through Mechanical Engineering from a new perspective. Make sure you check out this article and inform me how you feel. Today’s article is titled title and you could find the full article printed below for convenience:
Please explain this considering i am just a second year IE student
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I am attending Texas A & M next year and i can’t decide between majoring in mechanical or petroleum engineering. I know mechanical is a more broader major and i would have plenty of opportunities and such but i heard in petroleum you PAID.. So i can’t decide. Please don’t give me anything about what I like and my passion because I honestly don’t care, they’re both engineering anyways. So if someone could just give me useful advice, it would be great!
From the context of the degrees offered by US Universities.
Or is it two different names for the same discipline?
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I am unsure of which to major in, they seem very similar. Do they both produce new products? It seems Chemical engineers only invent the processes, so I’m slightly confused. Thanks!
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I am quite confused about these two and am interested in innovation rather than how materials are processed. Which one of the two can fit this request?
What are the differences between CAD and CAM?
Becides CAD being computer-aided design and CAM being computer-aided manufacture.
How much alike are they and what are some key differences between them in there use?
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I am a little confused. Why is possible to have a mechanical advantage greater than 1 but you cannot have a mechanical efficiency greater than 100%
I am doing my undergraduate right now, but I am not sure where I want to major in mechanical engineering or biology/chemistry and go into medical school.
Any advice?
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these are two different programs and they offer bachelor of science and bachelor of engineering. they sound similar but give different bachelor degrees. what are the actual differences?
also, what does undergraduate mean?
thanks a lot.