Poorly edited, but convincing and comprehensive... | Build Your Own Electric Vehicle | Seth Leitman, Bob Brant
 
 



Suche books:   



Build Your Own Electric Vehicle







Seth Leitman, Bob Brant

McGraw-Hill/TAB Electronics, 2008 - 327 pages

average customer review:based on 52 reviews
view larger image
 for more information click here

   highly recommended  highly recommended






Few changes from the first version

This is a great guide and the first edition would be rated much higher by me. I consider this to be the best book on conversions. But I was really hoping this second edition would be updated with the many improvements we have seen, especially in battery technology. Unfortunately the authors gave just superficial coverage on new lithium batteries and AC systems. I would say 98% of the book is the first edition.


Electric Vehicle

Fast delivery. Very deltailed and percise. A recommended read for the person building an electic vehicle.


Poorly edited, but convincing and comprehensive...

I picked up this book because I was curious. I am a car guy who loves working on his cars, and loves motor sports, especially dirt track racing. I am probably not the target audience for this book.

Still, my thinking on ecology has been seriously challenged by my Church (I am Catholic, and Vatican City State is the world's first carbon neutral country, and the Pope has been adamant about our duty to be good stewards of the planet). This has challenged my thinking. Also, the national security implications of our addiction to foreign oil has also challenged my thinking. I have decided it is time to begin the process of weaning myself and my family off of fossil fuels. After composting and planting a garden, making the house more energy efficient, and adopting a generally more green lifestyle, this is the next step.

I dug into this book, and loved much of it. However, it is in desperate need of a competent editor, and may be a little difficult to wade through as a result, but the content is excellent and is there for you if you are willing to dig a bit.

Let me address the strengths of this excellent book first:

1) The section on the history of the electric car, its technology, and its strengths and weaknesses is comprehensive and very convincing. I was somewhat skeptical at first but after reading this book I am convinced that a) electric cars are the wave of the future, b) my concerns about them were largely misplaced, c) it is probably my patriotic duty to drive one, both because I love the US and support Israel, and d) the environment, and our pocketbooks, NEED us to move away from the internal combustion engine.

2) The mathematical sections, while difficult to wade through and in desperate need of a good educator/editor to make the material more understandable, are actually quite strong if you really stick to them. However, there is so much help out there on line now that you really don't need to do any of these mathematical formulations. Kits for conversion are now commercially available and there are experts out there willing to answer questions for free. This book needed an editor to keep reminding the authors to "keep it simple, stupid."

3) This topic is just fascinating, and it would be difficult for any remotely competent author to mess it up.

4) Despite what you may think about complexity, EV's are actually REALLY simple and elegant, and you are not being made obsolete and you are NOT being forced to hang up your ratchets. This is a big deal for some guys. After all, as is so eloquently pointed out in Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work car manufacturers and others are busy designing products that "hide the works" in an almost blatant attempt to keep people ignorant and divorced from their machines. This is as unnecessary as it is stupid. The electric car predates the internal combustion car, and is what Mrs. Henry Ford drove (I am not kidding). You can relatively easily build one yourself on a used chassis (any used car... preferably light). You can do this with little or no mechanical experience. When you see how easy it is by going on line and looking at the work others have done, and start experimenting yourself, you will get VERY angry at car companies for not getting this right sooner. It really is impossible to understand how it has taken so long for car companies to wake up to the fact that we NEED EVs.

Weaknesses:

1) The future of the EV, as other reviewers have pointed out, is NOT likely to be DC (unless perhaps one is drag racing). If you want mileage, and the ability to get up hills well, I think AC motors are superior (and yes... more expensive). The data are clear however, and GM has put its (umm... our?) money in the AC camp with the new Volt, and there is a reason for that. There is not enough information here on AC.

2) Really... how expensive is it to hire an editor? I mean, mistaking "then" with "than" over and over again in the mathematics section made me distrust the fact that these guys had their math right. Learn to use the English language correctly, and if you are not strong in this area, HIRE AN EDITOR. This isn't some self produced book either. Its McGraw Hill! Exactly who was responsible to sit these boys down and say: "this section is entirely unnecessary... these words and misspelled.... this book would be more user friendly if..." The editing is abominable, and is a real drawback. The standards of editing are similar with what you see on online reviews like this one. This is not a good thing. Someone who edited for the "For Dummies" series could have turned this into a world class book. Instead, it is a 3 star book. That is a shame.

3) The strength of the EV is that it is simple, has fewer moving parts, is therefore very reliable, and is very good for the planet. I enjoy turning the ratchets... I do not enjoy doing oil changes. I won't miss them when they are gone. The strength of the EV is it is easy to understand, and that you can work on it yourself very easily, even build one from scratch with little mechanical experience. Simplicity is a strength. The book is too complex, introduces unnecessary concepts (like mathematical formulas.. which while fun will slow you down), and is therefore unlikely to appeal to guys who can do this conversion with their eyes closed. I am referring here to the countless shade tree/home garage techs who do their own brakes, do their own oil, watch NASCAR, love cars because they are CARS, and enjoy turning ratchets. This is who I am, but I needed the college degree I sometimes think I wasted my money on to get through some of this book. There was no reason for that.

Still, I strongly recommend this book. It educated me on how EVs work, and I am planning my own conversion. After reading this book, and doing some additional research, I understand how the new hybrids work, how the new VOLT will work, and I understand that I can still work on my cars and enjoy them even if they are electric. This is VERY important, and something I hope the car companies get right. It would be very easy for them to get this wrong... introduce a "solid state" car or something ludicrous. I hope to heck they don't do this. If they do, I will be only driving my own aftermarket conversions from now on.


 for more information click here




 for more information click here


Pretty good

This book is pretty good. It covers the basics of EV building. My main issue with it is that it has become woefully out of date. In the years since it was published, controllers, batteries and motors have all changed for the better. The EVs you could build with this book are too old-school.

I am all for the home builder doing their thing, its just that this book needs some updates and links to where you can find the best new controllers, motors, batteries out on the web. If you were wondering what it would take to convert that old 4 banger car into an EV vehicle this book will get you started in the right direction basically.

From there you can probably find what you are looking for out on the web. So its a decent source, just realize its a bit dated.

Thanks for reading my review.


 for more information click here






Go Green-Go Electric! Faster, Cheaper, More Reliable While Saving Energy and the Environment

?Empowering people with the tools to convert their own vehicles provides an immediate path away from petroleum dependence and should be part of the solutions portfolio.? ? Chelsea Sexton, Co-founder, Plug In America and featured in Who Killed the Electric Car?

?Create a superior driving experience, strengthen America, and restore the planet?s ecosystems?that?s the promise of this book and it?s well worth a read!? ? Josh Dorfman, Founder & CEO ? Vivavi, Modern Green Furniture Store; Author, The Lazy Environmentalist: Your Guide to Easy, Stylish, Green Living.

This new, updated edition of Build Your Own Electric Vehicle contains everything that made the first edition so popular while adding all the technological advances and new parts that are readily available on the market today.

Build Your Own Electric Vehicle gets on the expressway to a green, ecologically sound, cost-effective way that even can look cool, too!

This comprehensive how-to goes through the process of transforming an internal combustion engine vehicle to electric or even building an EV from scratch for as much or even cheaper than purchasing a traditional car. The book describes each component in detail---motor, battery, controller, charger, and chassis---and provides step-by-step instructions on how to put them all together.

Build Your Own Electric Vehicle, Second Edition, covers: EV vs. Combustible Engine Overview Environmental and Energy Savings EV Evolution since the First Electric Car Current Purchase and Conversion Costs Chassis and Design Today's Best Motors Battery Discharging/Charging Styles Electrical Systems Licensing and Insurance Issues Driving Maintenance Related Clubs and Associations Additional Resources


 for more information click here



reviews: page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10



hot or not?    What's your opinion?     Write a review and share your thoughts!






recommendations

Books on environmentalism which President Obama should be reading
Electric Vehicles & Green Transportation Can Help Global Warming
Electric Cars: Take Matters into Your Own Hands
Reducing our Dependence on Foreign Oil
Fighting for Energy







   


electric

The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind: Young Readers Edition
Set Lighting Technician's Handbook: Film Lighting Equipment, ...
Turkey Fryers & Deep Fried Turkey: How To Deep Fry A Turkey- Complete ...
Fretboard Theory - Learn Guitar Theory, Scales, Chords, Progressions, ...
Smoking Meat: The Essential Guide to Real Barbecue



vehicle

Incredible Cross-Sections of Star Wars: The Ultimate Guide to Star ...
Goodnight, Goodnight Construction Site
How to Draw Cars and Trucks and Other Vehicles (Dover How to Draw)
Star Wars Complete Cross-Sections: The Spacecraft and Vehicles of the ...
Vehicles: Experiments in Synthetic Psychology



build

Build Your Own underground Root Cellar
Build Your Vocabulary Skills! A Quick and Easy Method
Build the Perfect Bug Out Bag: Your 72-Hour Disaster Survival Kit
My Personality is Weak! How to Build Leadership Habits in 7 Simple ...
Build a Smokehouse: Storey Country Wisdom Bulletin A-81




search for books
build your, build, electric, own, vehicle, your




Suche books:   


books
apparel
baby
beauty
books
camera photo
cell phones
classical music
computers
dvd
electronics
gourmet food
health personal care
kitchen
magazines
musical instruments
office products
outdoor living
computer video games
popular music
pet-supplies
software
sporting goods
tools hardware
toys-games
vhs
watches jewelry


randomly chosen


Horsemen

home  impressum - about us