Amundies
Commander-in-Chief
I'm only in my 3rd year in a 5 year degree, but what I've noticed so far is that outside of the specific maths subjects that we're required to take, the maths in actual mech engineering subjects (like fluids, thermo, statics, etc.) is quite straightforward. I'm guessing it'll start to step up again in the final few subjects, but so far most of my time (and my friends' time) have been spent on actually trying to understand problems and seeing if there are any concepts we can apply to simplify the problem, stuff like that. Personally, I really enjoy subjects like this because you feel like you're actually solving a problem, rather than memorising equations or doing lines and lines of math for no apparent reason.
To give you an idea, there's a subject called Mech Design that you take in 3rd year at USYD. I haven't taken it yet, but my friends who took it showed me their assignments. They were basically just given a task (one task was lifting a submarine that was on the seabed out of the water), and told to design something that could lift it up. As you can imagine, solving the problem is actually much more difficult than the maths you'd run into (which might include some statics/dynamics, some fluids maybe if you're advanced enough).
I also have the same problem as you btw, suck at anything EE related because I just can't visualise it I didn't even understand the difference between parallel and series circuits til year 12...
To give you an idea, there's a subject called Mech Design that you take in 3rd year at USYD. I haven't taken it yet, but my friends who took it showed me their assignments. They were basically just given a task (one task was lifting a submarine that was on the seabed out of the water), and told to design something that could lift it up. As you can imagine, solving the problem is actually much more difficult than the maths you'd run into (which might include some statics/dynamics, some fluids maybe if you're advanced enough).
I also have the same problem as you btw, suck at anything EE related because I just can't visualise it I didn't even understand the difference between parallel and series circuits til year 12...