Statics · Module 1 of 11 · Beginner

General Principles

Start with the model. Statics begins when a real object becomes a clean force picture.

01

Readiness check

Be honest: tick only what you can do closed-notes, right now.

  • Rearrange an equation like F = ma to solve for any variable.
  • Find sin, cos, and tan of 30°, 45°, and 60° with a calculator in degree mode.
  • Write 0.00347 in scientific notation and as a prefixed unit (m, k, M, G).
  • Multiply and divide powers of ten without a calculator.
  • Explain the difference between an exact number and a measured number.
0 or 1 weak itemsContinue with this module.
2 weak itemsReview the algebra and trig refresher in Math for Engineers first, then return.
3 or more weak itemsStep back: complete Math for Engineers and Physics: Mechanics before starting Statics.
02

The core idea

Statics is the art of replacing a real object with an honest, simple model.

W = mgg = 9.81 m/s²

Mass (kg) is the amount of matter. Weight (N) is the force gravity exerts on it. This single distinction prevents half of all first-year errors.

The model works when: the body is at rest (or moving at constant velocity), deformations are negligible, and forces can be idealized as concentrated or distributed loads.
The model breaks down when: the body accelerates (that is Dynamics), or deformation matters to the answer (that is Mechanics of Materials).
The concept. Engineering analysis starts by reducing a real hoist and engine block to a particle with two forces: cable tension up, weight down.
03

The method

1Look

What object are we studying, and what touches it?

2Simplify

Particle, rigid body, beam, truss, or area?

3Draw

FBD: forces, supports, axes, distances, unknowns.

4Solve

Only now write the equations and calculate.

04

Worked example: the weight of an engine block

A 75 kg engine block hangs from a workshop hoist. Report its weight in newtons and kilonewtons, to 3 significant figures.

Figure 1. Problem setup: a 75 kg engine block on a single hoist cable.
Figure 2. Free-body diagram. At rest, T = W, so the cable carries 736 N.
applied forcereaction (cable)axes
  1. ProblemFind the weight of the block in Figure 1 and the force in the cable.
  2. Given / findm = 75 kg, g = 9.81 m/s². Find W in N and kN.
  3. AssumptionsStandard gravity; the block hangs at rest, so the cable tension equals the weight.
  4. ModelFigure 2: the block is a particle with two forces, cable tension T up and weight W down.
  5. EquationsW = mg
  6. SolveW = 75 × 9.81 = 735.75 N, so W ≈ 736 N = 0.736 kN. Round only at the end.
  7. CheckUnits: kg × m/s² = N. Reasonableness: 1 kg weighs about 10 N, so 75 kg should weigh roughly 750 N.
  8. ConclusionThe hoist cable must carry about 0.74 kN, so a hoist rated 1 kN has a comfortable margin, while a 0.5 kN hoist would be overloaded.
Result. W = 736 N = 0.736 kN; cable tension T = 736 N.
05

Misconceptions and diagnostics

MistakeSymptomDiagnostic questionCorrection
Treating kg as a forceAnswers off by a factor of about 10; units that do not cancel"Is this quantity matter or a push/pull?"Mass in kg, force in N. Convert with W = mg before any force equation.
Rounding mid-calculationFinal answer drifts from the book answer in the last digit"Did I store the full value in the calculator?"Carry at least 4 figures through the work; round to 3 at the end.
Mixing mm and m in one equationAnswers wrong by factors of 10³ or 10⁶"Are all lengths in the same unit before I substitute?"Convert everything to base SI units first, prefix the final answer.
Skipping the model stepYou can quote formulas but cannot start a new problem"What is the object, and what touches it?"Always answer Look, Simplify, Draw before any equation.
06

Practice ladder

Level 1 · Direct skill

A 120 kg pallet rests on the floor. Find its weight in N and kN.

Show answer

W = 120 × 9.81 = 1177.2 N ≈ 1.18 kN. Check: about 10 N per kg gives roughly 1200 N.

Level 2 · Mixed concept

A datasheet lists a linear actuator force as 2.5 kN. Express it in N, in MN, and state the mass (in kg) it could hold against gravity.

Show answer

2.5 kN = 2500 N = 0.0025 MN. Supported mass m = F/g = 2500/9.81 ≈ 255 kg.

Level 3 · Independent problem

Estimate the weight of a typical passenger car (assume m ≈ 1500 kg), then judge whether a jack rated "2 tonnes" can lift one corner (about 30% of the weight).

Show answer

W ≈ 1500 × 9.81 ≈ 14.7 kN. One corner ≈ 0.30 × 14.7 ≈ 4.4 kN ≈ 450 kg. A 2-tonne (about 2000 kg) jack has a safety margin of roughly 4×.

Level 4 · Transfer to real engineering

Find a real product datasheet (e-bike motor, drone, hoist). Audit every quantity: identify which are masses, which are forces, and check one unit conversion the manufacturer made. Write 3 sentences on what you found.

What good work looks like

You correctly separate kg from N, recompute one stated value (for example payload force from payload mass), and flag any rounding or unit ambiguity in the datasheet.

07

Working with AI, and proving it yourself

Use AI as an examiner, not a solver

"Here is my solution to a unit-conversion problem. Check each step and tell me where my units stop cancelling, but do not give the corrected answer."
"Generate five mass-vs-weight problems with different numbers and unit systems. I will answer; only then grade me."
"Convert these values for me." You lose the exact skill this module builds.
"Solve my homework problem 1.4." A pass today, a fail at the exam.

Portfolio task

Create a one-page "Engineering Units Cheat Sheet" in your own words: SI base and derived units used in statics, the W = mg rule, the 3-significant-figure rounding rule, and two worked conversions. Add it to your portfolio repository; you will reuse it in every later course.

Must include: assumptions, one worked conversion with unit cancellation shown, one limitation (when g is not 9.81).
08

Retrieval and spaced review

Closed notes. Answer out loud, then reveal.

1. What is the difference between mass and weight, including units?

Mass (kg) is the quantity of matter and is location-independent. Weight (N) is the gravitational force on that mass: W = mg.

2. Name the four base quantities used in mechanics and their SI units.

Length (m), time (s), mass (kg), force (N, derived from F = ma; kg·m/s²).

3. When is a real object allowed to be modeled as a particle?

When its size and shape do not affect the answer and all forces effectively act through one point.

4. Which of Newton's laws is the foundation of statics, and what does it say?

The first law: a body at rest stays at rest when the resultant force on it is zero: equilibrium.

5. State the rounding discipline used in engineering calculations.

Carry full precision through intermediate steps; round the final answer to 3 significant figures (typical engineering practice).

TodayFinish this quiz and Levels 1 and 2 of the ladder.
+1 dayRedo the 5 quiz questions from memory, out loud.
+3 daysSolve one new Level 2 problem you write yourself.
+7 daysMixed set: one unit problem inside a Module 2 vector problem.
+30 daysRe-derive your cheat sheet from a blank page; compare.
09

Textbook mapping

ItemMapping
Main textbookR.C. Hibbeler, Engineering Mechanics: Statics, Chapter 1, General Principles
Core sections1.1 Mechanics · 1.2 Fundamental Concepts · 1.3 Units of Measurement · 1.4 The International System of Units · 1.5 Numerical Calculations · 1.6 General Procedure for Analysis
Recommended problemsEnd-of-chapter Problems set (after 1.6). Do at least 6 conversion and weight problems until they feel boring.
Skip on first passNothing: this chapter is short and every section pays off later.
Read nextChapter 2, sections 2.1 to 2.4 before opening Module 2.