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MAK 301
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Course Information
Course Name
Turkish
Makina Elemanları I
English
Machine Design I
Course Code
MAK 301
Credit
Lecture
(hour/week)
Recitation
(hour/week)
Laboratory
(hour/week)
Semester
6
-
3
1
-
Course Language
Turkish
Course Coordinator
Hikmet Kocabaş
Course Objectives
1. To introduce the analysis phase and machine elements in mechanical design.
2. To develop mathematical models for functional analysis and stress calculation of machine elements by using engineering sciences. By using the available experimental models determine the input and output values of the machine system elements.
3. To use the standards and design criteria.
4. To improve the goal recognition, creativity and intuition and also to enable the students to gain experience in machine design.
5. To provide the necessary knowledge and capability for task spesification, consept formation and synthesis phases of the machine design. To develop the further stages of the machine design; manufacturing of prototypes, testing and marketing.
Course Description
Mechanical engineering design activity and importance of machine elements knowledge in this activity. Fundamentals of design and applications of machine elements. Welded, soldered, adhesive bonded, riveted joints. Shaft-hub connections. Bolted joints and power screw
mechanisms. Pins, knuckles, springs, shafts and axles, coupling and clutches,
Course Outcomes
At the end of this course, students should be able to:
1. Recognize formation and calculation welded, soldered, adhesive bonded and riveted joints.
2. Recognize machine elements which are used in form and force connected shaft-to-hub connections
and their standards. Recognize the formation and calculation methods of the keys, splined and
profiled shafts, pin joints, press and fit joints and friction-joints with intermediate parts.
3. Recognize the design and standards of the pins and knuckles.
4. Recognize bolted joints, power screw mechanisms and screw thread forms and their standards,
screw mechanics, calculation of stresses in bolted and screw joints and their determination of
dimensions, and also known the design of preloaded bolted joints.
5. Recognize the elastic behaviour of materials, application areas of springs and their properties, and
also know the designs of the flat, leaf, helical and special metal and rubber springs.
6. Recognize the types and standards of axles and shafts and their stress, deformation and vibration
calculations.
7. Recognize the types, characteristics, application limits, dynamic behaviours and heat balance of the
couplings and clutches.
8. Recognize lubrication; friction and wear, lubricants and their characteristics, viscosity, the effects
of temperature and pressure, additives.
9. Recognize the lubrication theory, form of load-carrying films and Reynold’s differential equation.
10. Recognize the sliding bearings; define the types and load carrying ability and calculation of bearing
temperature of the external pressed thrust and journal bearings and also hydrodynamic thrust and
journal bearings.
11. Define types and standards of rolling bearings and determination of their bearing dimensions under
static and dynamic loads. Recognize Stribeck and Palmgren-Eschmann equations. Basic load
rating, basic life. Bearing selection under variable loads and variable number of revolutions.
Statistical characteristics of bearing lives.
12. Select machine elements by means of tutorials and homework. Determine the dimensions of the
machine elements by using strength of materials calculations. Understand application of standards
and design criteria of the machine elements.
Pre-requisite(s)
MAK112 (Minimum DD), MAK223 (Minimum DD), MAK213 (Minimum DD)
Required Facilities
Other
Textbook
Machine Design I Course notes
Other References
Joseph Edward Shigley, Mechanical Engineering Design, McGraw-Hill International Editions, First Metric Edition, 1986.
Haberhauer/Bodenstein, Machinenelemente, 11. Auflage, Springer, 2001.
Juvinall, R.J. and Marshek, K.M., Fundamentals of Machine Component Design, 3rd Edition, John Wiley & Sons, 2000.
Deutschman, A.D., Wilson,C.E and Michels, W.J., Machine Design, Prentice Hall, 1996.
Cameron, A. The Principles of Lubrication, Longmans, 1966.
Moore, D.F., Principles and Applications of Tribology, Pergamon Press, 1975.
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