It is a really simple book and not particularly academic, but you have to start somewhere.
It is basically the equivalent of a picture book, with 200 pages of free body diagrams, which may be helpful to someone if they aren't used to thinking in terms of beams, forces, and moments.
The entire books' contents is probably covered in pages of Shigley's, and perhaps for some people that is enough..
Ah yes, it was hard for me to tell the difference even reading the spellings side by side.
That said, it is definitely the weakest of the suggestions. The rest are serious books that a professional might refer back to. On the other hand you should really never need to refer back to a statics text, and it could be switched out for any number of options.
I really appreciate the recommendations. I have enough knowledge of the field to understand that control engineering and vibrational modes are extremely important but not enough to know what's most important to know about them or which books are more reliable or better written.
What do you think about Reuleaux's Kinematics of Machinery and the Machinery's Handbook?
I don't have experience with your kinematics book, and have some limited exposure to machinery's handbook. My impression of the latter is that it is good and highly regarded, but perhaps more on the Practical fabrication side then engineering Theory.
It is basically the equivalent of a picture book, with 200 pages of free body diagrams, which may be helpful to someone if they aren't used to thinking in terms of beams, forces, and moments.
The entire books' contents is probably covered in pages of Shigley's, and perhaps for some people that is enough..