Use this forum for general discussion
2 posts • Page 1 of 1
Mechanical and Electrical Engineering Homework Resources

by LeslieDalton » Sat Oct 18, 2025 9:46 am

Hey guys, I’m a third-year Mechanical Engineering student at Purdue and lately I’ve been buried under mixed mechanical-electrical projects — mechatronics, control systems, energy transfer models. I’ve tried YouTube, Reddit threads, and even MIT OCW, but it all feels scattered and surface-level. I don’t need another list of textbooks. I want something that helps connect the dots — how to actually understand how these systems talk to each other. Any unconventional resources or weird tricks that helped you “get it” for real? Something beyond what professors mention in class.
User avatar
Posts: 202

Re: Mechanical and Electrical Engineering Homework Resources

by KateFair » Sat Oct 18, 2025 9:47 am

Yeah man, been there. I studied at Georgia Tech and those hybrid courses nearly broke me too. What really worked was getting hands-on, not just grinding equations. I started messing with small Arduino builds while watching industrial design breakdowns — suddenly the abstract control theory started making sense. I’d watch teardown videos of Tesla components or even Dyson motors just to see how those principles translate into real parts.

Also, weirdly enough, I learned a ton about structuring my thoughts from totally unrelated stuff — reading analytical essays from bestessaywritingservicereddit.com helped me make sense of complex ideas. When our team had to pitch a prototype, we brought in top business plan writers just to polish how we explained the tech. And when I was prepping for grad school, I used an admission essay writing service once — not for cheating, but to see how pros build clarity in writing. It changed how I explain my own engineering ideas. Once your words get sharper, your designs start to make more sense too.
User avatar
Posts: 174

2 posts • Page 1 of 1

Return to General Discussion