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Statics and Dynamics are the first true engineering science courses you’ll take. They’re where you stop just doing math and start thinking like an engineer — analyzing forces, moments, and motion. And they’re where many students hit their first real university wall.
At Fit Minds Academy, our engineering tutors help you connect the dots between theory and problem-solving so you walk into exams confident, not cramming.
Statics and Dynamics are the two branches of engineering mechanics — the study of forces and motion. At most Canadian universities, they’re taught either as a single combined course or as two separate back‑to‑back courses.
Depending on your university, your course might be called:
You’ll learn to draw free‑body diagrams, calculate resultant forces and moments, analyze trusses using the method of joints and method of sections, and find centroids and moments of inertia.
You’ll study kinematics and kinetics of particles and rigid bodies, apply Newton’s second law, use work‑energy and impulse‑momentum methods, and analyze vibrations.
These courses aren’t just prerequisites — they’re the language your entire engineering degree is built on. If you’re heading into , , or structural analysis, every concept from statics shows up again.
Yes — and the reasons are consistent across every engineering program in Canada.
Students who skip the free‑body diagram stage (statics) and the kinetic diagram stage (dynamics) almost always lose marks — not because they can’t do the math, but because they don’t have a clear picture of what’s happening.
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1. Draw the object isolated from its surroundings.
2. Draw every force acting on it: weight, normal reactions, tension, friction, applied forces.
3. Replace supports with their reaction forces: pin (two components), roller (one perpendicular reaction), fixed (forces plus a moment).
4. Label all known angles and dimensions.
5. Solve ΣF_x = 0, ΣF_y = 0, ΣM = 0.
The most common error? Forgetting the moment equilibrium equation or misplacing a reaction component. Always count your unknowns and equations — if they don’t match, look for a missing reaction.
A resultant force is the single force that has the same effect as all the original forces combined. For concurrent forces, add them vectorially. For non‑concurrent forces, also account for the resultant moment. Knowing how to find the resultant quickly will save you time on almost every statics problem.
Method of Joints
Look at each joint in sequence. For a joint with only two unknown member forces, solve ΣF_x = 0, ΣF_y = 0. Work from a joint with known reactions outward.
Method of Sections
Cut the truss into two pieces, exposing no more than three unknown member forces. Apply ΣM about a point where two of the unknowns intersect to solve for the third directly.
The velocity of A relative to B is v_A/B = v_A − v_B. For rigid bodies, the motion of any point can be expressed as the motion of a reference point plus a rotational component: v_B = v_A + ω × r_B/A. Get comfortable with vector cross products — they show up everywhere in rigid body dynamics.
Statics and dynamics are two parts of a single subject: engineering mechanics. Statics analyzes bodies at rest; dynamics analyzes bodies in motion. The thinking is the same: draw the correct diagram, write the governing equations, solve systematically.
If you struggle in statics, dynamics will feel twice as hard — because dynamics assumes complete mastery of free‑body diagrams, force resolution, and moment calculation. Get statics down solid first.
Already in dynamics and realize your statics is shaky? Our and can fill those gaps quickly. See all prerequisites on our page.
Every resource is built to match the way engineering exams are actually structured — organized, practical, and exam‑ready.
Force vectors, equilibrium equations, centroids, moment of inertia formulas, kinematics equations, Newton's second law, work‑energy, impulse‑momentum, vibration formulas. Covers CIV 100, ENGG 2040, and equivalents.
What’s inside:
Truss analysis, frame/machine problems, 2D/3D equilibrium, kinematics of rigid bodies, vibration problems. Fully worked step‑by‑step.
What’s inside:
Every topic broken into checkable items: Got it / Needs review / Don't understand yet. The exact tool our own students use before midterms and finals.
What’s inside:
No hidden fees. No long contracts. Your first session has a 100% money-back guarantee.
Our statics and dynamics tutors are engineering graduates and professionals who’ve been through the exact courses you’re taking. They know your course, your exam style, and the diagrams that make the difference.
Every tutor is matched to you 1-on-1 based on your university, your course, and where you’re stuck. You won’t be handed off to a generalist — you’ll work with someone who has solved the same problem sets.
We offer in‑person Statics and Dynamics tutoring across Mississauga, Toronto, Brampton, Oakville, Richmond Hill, Scarborough, North York, and Burlington. For students in Hamilton, Markham, Newmarket, Guelph, Waterloo, London, Calgary, Edmonton, Ottawa, Montreal, Winnipeg, and Vancouver — fully interactive online sessions are available. Wherever you are in Canada, we’re here to help.
Statics is the study of forces on structures and bodies at rest. You learn to analyze equilibrium, draw free‑body diagrams, and calculate reactions, internal forces in trusses, centroids, and moments of inertia.
Dynamics is the extension of mechanics to bodies in motion. You study kinematics (describing motion) and kinetics (relating forces to motion), including Newton’s laws, work‑energy, impulse‑momentum, rigid body dynamics, and vibrations.
It can be, because it demands a new kind of spatial reasoning. The math itself (algebra, basic calculus) isn’t the issue — it’s learning to set up problems correctly. With practice and the right coaching, most students find statics becomes systematic and even intuitive.
Most engineering students say yes, because dynamics requires you to choose between multiple solution approaches and often involves more complex calculus. However, a solid statics foundation makes dynamics significantly more manageable.
Statics deals with bodies at rest; dynamics deals with bodies in motion. In practice, statics focuses heavily on equilibrium, truss analysis, and static reaction forces, while dynamics covers acceleration, velocity, and the forces that cause motion.
Strong algebra, vector resolution, and basic calculus (derivatives, integration). Many problems in dynamics use simple differential equations. If your calculus is weak, our and tutoring can run alongside.
Yes. Our online sessions are fully interactive with a shared digital whiteboard — you see every diagram and equation drawn in real time, just like sitting next to a tutor.
Visit our page or click the button below. Choose your time, and we’ll match you with an engineering tutor who knows your specific course. Your first session is risk‑free — 100% money-back guarantee.
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No hidden fees. No long contracts. Your first session has a 100% money-back guarantee.
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