yes Electronics Engineering is harder than mechanical engg......... because in electronics we study all the fundamental formulas of mechanical or we use all the bais concepts of mechanical to derive electronics features or to clear electronics basics....
but we dont use electronic's fundamentals in mechanical engg.....
conclusion is that.. for electronics engg we must have the knowlege of mechanical and electronics both ..... then we can be able to clear all the concepts or all the queries of electronis basics ....
but for mechanical we dont use the knowledge of electronics...... mechanical is a straight branch....
while in electronics thers id a mixture of (electronics+mechanical+computer+chemical) other branches...... if we wanna be master of electronics world we must have the knowledge of all (electronics+mechanical+computer+chemical)
but for mechanical ... we must have the knowledge for basic mechanics statics and all... electronics knowledge is not must for mechanical......
so electronics is more tough branch than mechanical.......
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Minimum CGPA for any core company these days is 8.5...so start working harder boys..
Both MBBS and Engineering are difficult degrees and occupations in their own rights.
It isn't really harder. It just has more math and science, and some people find those subjects hard ... whereas others might really enjoy those subjects. It really depends on your personal preferences and skills.
The hardness of any material is how much it keep it's original shape when put under pressure against another material. Example a drill or cutting tip will have to harder than the material it has to cut, so must maintain it's cutting edge and shape to cut effectively. Hardness is usually measured using a vickers scale, or the old Brinell way which are both a method of testing the hardness of a material.
Yes, most steel is harder than pure platinum. Steel is an alloy of several different elements. If you were to add alloying elements to Platinum, it would become harder as well.
Electronics
Minimum CGPA for any core company these days is 8.5...so start working harder boys..
Both MBBS and Engineering are difficult degrees and occupations in their own rights.
I do believe that both of them are very hard to get a degree on but if i would have to say the hardest i would have to say engineering because they have more stuff you would have to learn and harder things to do
Finance is more quantitive so finance is more hard than engineering,Finance has great scope as well
Same: they can do the same thing Different: Lego = easy to break Mechanical = harder to break
Not at at all, both fields are mathematics heavy.
No 2 pencils come in a variety of sizes and styles (traditional and mechanical pencils). The "No 2" means it's a medium grade lead...there are harder leads that write lighter in color (usually used for drafting and engineering), and softer leads that write darker in color (usually used by artists)...
Validation engineering jobs are indeed popular but are also in high demand right now. The website indeed.com has almost 20000 validation engineering jobs available right now. Senior engineering jobs are a little harder to get into, but also available.
Gold is very soft, almost useless for most engineering purposes. Diamond OTOH is the hardest substance known to man.
Because there are Several different problems with electronics in countries such as Europe: So if you had an electronic made and used in the U.s. it is easier to process and use. ( :
Radios, TVs, domestic appliances, computers and their peripherals - to a point. The smaller and more compact the electronics on a PCB the harder it is to salvage anything intact from the board, but the instrument as whole may yield sub-assemblies such as power-supplies, and various discrete components like capacitors, inductors, switches and connectors. I've also salvaged mechanical components such as carriage guide-bars (precision-ground steel) and small gears, circlips, screws etc from old scanners and printers. Larger equipment may yield useful motors.