Best industrial quality control books according to redditors

We found 9 Reddit comments discussing the best industrial quality control books. We ranked the 6 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

Next page

Top Reddit comments about Industrial Quality Control:

u/ModalMonkey · 5 pointsr/engineering

Bendat & Piersol's Random Data: Analysis and Measurement Procedures 4th Edition is a great place to start for signal processing and has a chapter on non-stationary analysis. This is the go-to signal processing book for many in the acoustics and structural dynamics communities.

​

I've only gotten tangential exposure to wavelet transforms. I'm sorry I can't help with that.

u/chucknappap · 5 pointsr/AskEngineers

The ultimate authority for GD&T is ASME Y14.5, so you should at least have it on hand for reference, but there are plenty of books / pocket guides on the topic that are easier to understand.

Pocket Guide to Geometrics

Design Dimensioning and Tolerancing

edit: Also Y14.100 for general drawing format & practices.

u/Nerdloaf · 2 pointsr/datascience

This is a 700 page book and it's only an introduction to linear regression, do you really think you can read it and fully understand it in two weeks?
https://www.amazon.com/Introduction-Regression-Analysis-Douglas-Montgomery/dp/0470542810

u/RA_Fisher · 2 pointsr/statistics
u/Scrtcwlvl · 1 pointr/EngineeringStudents

This is the book the class I took and currently TA for uses.

http://www.amazon.com/Theory-Mechanical-Measurements-Richard-Figliola/dp/0470547413

What would you like to know about strain gauges? I'm certainly not an expert, but I know enough to get by.

u/5till0fthenight · -2 pointsr/rutgers

Find out the textbooks that are used for the major stat classes. This is the book used for Regression Methods:

https://www.amazon.com/Introduction-Regression-Analysis-Douglas-Montgomery/dp/0470542810/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1506402483&sr=8-1&keywords=linear+regression+analysis

Preview it. Now if that looks pretty intimidating to you, ask yourself if it is something you think you can understand. What is in that textbook is expected for you to understand even if the work you do in class is watered down a lot.

To truly understand that stuff you would have to be very skilled in mathematical reasoning and applications.