Brentum
Active member
I'm going to do one of these two as my profession dabbles somewhat in both. Mainly compressed air, dewpoints, and liquid pumps. I first thought was the Thermo and fluids. But looking at the HVAC questions, that seemed a little easier and more intuitive. However, most people here seem to be doing Machine Design or Thermo. And the few people that are doing the HVAC talk about a whole slew of books they want to have. (Do you have time hunt through 5-10 HVAC books?) Do you need a lot of extra reference material for the HVAC? Is there a reason most people aren't taking that one? Is my perspective out of whack that it seems easier than thermo?
Just curious. I know it's only 10 days to test time, I've been focused mainly on Fluids and HVAC as far as the topics. Pretty much figured I'd be taking the HVAC but not I am having second thoughts.
I just ordered an HVAC reference book that should be here this week, but it's the only one besides the MERM that was was planning on taking in (I have a Manufacturer's book with some head and pipe loss tables too). The Book is 2007 HVAC Equations, Data, and Rules of thumb by Bell. Never really had much HVAC in college compared to Thermo and MD, but my job as an applications/sales engineer in the pneumatic and liquid pump industry is a little closer to thermal and HVAC concepts, so I headed off in those areas.
So am I about to walk off a cliff here or what? I'm starting to get panicky....
Any advice?
Just curious. I know it's only 10 days to test time, I've been focused mainly on Fluids and HVAC as far as the topics. Pretty much figured I'd be taking the HVAC but not I am having second thoughts.
I just ordered an HVAC reference book that should be here this week, but it's the only one besides the MERM that was was planning on taking in (I have a Manufacturer's book with some head and pipe loss tables too). The Book is 2007 HVAC Equations, Data, and Rules of thumb by Bell. Never really had much HVAC in college compared to Thermo and MD, but my job as an applications/sales engineer in the pneumatic and liquid pump industry is a little closer to thermal and HVAC concepts, so I headed off in those areas.
So am I about to walk off a cliff here or what? I'm starting to get panicky....
Any advice?