Free AdviceGet Free Advice
Home | Get advice | Give advice | Topics | Columnists | - !START HERE! -
Make Suggestions | Sitemap

Get Advice


Search Questions

Ask A Question

Browse Advice Columnists

Search Advice Columnists

Chat Room

Give Advice

View Questions
Search Questions
Advice Topics

Login

Username:
Password:
Remember me
Register for free!
Lost Password?

Want to give Advice?

Sign Up Now
(It's FREE!)

Miscellaneous

Shirts and Stuff
Page Backgrounds
Make Suggestions
Site News
Link To Us
About Us
Terms of Service
Help/FAQ
Sitemap
Contact Us


Vector Mechanics for Engineers: Statics ?


Question Posted Friday September 29 2006, 7:27 pm

Hii , I would like to ask a question about this book (Vector Mechanics for Engineers: Statics), where can I find its Solution Manual ?
Thanks
ASAD


[ Answer this question ]
Want to answer more questions in the Work & School category?
Maybe give some free advice about: Colleges & Universities?


VanBrick answered Wednesday October 18 2006, 2:08 pm:
I have both Statics and Dynamics for that book, email me at hotmailsuckss@gmail.com

[ VanBrick's advice column | Ask VanBrick A Question
]




Wheeler answered Saturday September 30 2006, 10:41 pm:
Try looking on Ebay, they will be cheap to buy. If you buy them somewhere else they might be to over-expensive. Hope I helped!

[ Wheeler's advice column | Ask Wheeler A Question
]



Erronius answered Saturday September 30 2006, 4:35 am:
Normally, I would check the bookstore I bought it from, particularly if it came from a college bookstore, and see if they carry it. Even if they dont, they probably could point you in the right direction. Most of the places I have bought books from carried some of these alternative texts, though I myself usually avoided them (as the core texts are expensive enough by themselves).

I also figured I'd tool around and search for this. Now I dont know what version you are using (as I have found that they often change a lot between editions and schools usually change texts every so often), but I found this for the 7th edition of "Vector Mechanics for Engineers: Statics and Dynamics". You might be better off looking up a specific ISBN also to be 100% sure. Towards the bottom of that page there is a link for Homework Solutions ([Link](Mouse over link to see full location)) and assuming that is the same edition, that might be what you are looking for.

You might also just go to your Prof if this isn't taboo with him/her and ask them about it. I've had instructors who are fine with this anyways, as they are more concerned with exams...and an answer guide wont help you there lol. Of course, I am assuming you have this for a class, and aren't just reading it either for fun (erg) or for work (which is possible I suppose).

[ Erronius's advice column | Ask Erronius A Question
]

More Questions:

<<< Previous Question: Have you noticed?
Next Question >>> Boy.

Recent popular questions:
Want to give advice?

Click here to start your own advice column!

What happened here with my gamer friends?

All content on this page posted by members of advicenators.com is the responsibility those individual members. Other content © 2003-2014 advicenators.com. We do not promise accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any advice and are not responsible for content.

Attention: NOTHING on this site may be reproduced in any fashion whatsoever without explicit consent (in writing) of the owner of said material, unless otherwise stated on the page where the content originated. Search engines are free to index and cache our content.
Users who post their account names or personal information in their questions have no expectation of privacy beyond that point for anything they disclose. Questions are otherwise considered anonymous to the general public.

[Valid RSS] eXTReMe Tracker