Best electrical home improvement books according to redditors

We found 158 Reddit comments discussing the best electrical home improvement books. We ranked the 67 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Electrical Home Improvement:

u/dave9199 · 54 pointsr/preppers

If you move the decimal over. This is about 1,000 in books...

(If I had to pick a few for 100 bucks: encyclopedia of country living, survival medicine, wilderness medicine, ball preservation, art of fermentation, a few mushroom and foraging books.)


Medical:

Where there is no doctor

Where there is no dentist

Emergency War Surgery

The survival medicine handbook

Auerbach’s Wilderness Medicine

Special Operations Medical Handbook

Food Production

Mini Farming

encyclopedia of country living

square foot gardening

Seed Saving

Storey’s Raising Rabbits

Meat Rabbits

Aquaponics Gardening: Step By Step

Storey’s Chicken Book

Storey Dairy Goat

Storey Meat Goat

Storey Ducks

Storey’s Bees

Beekeepers Bible

bio-integrated farm

soil and water engineering

Organic Mushroom Farming and Mycoremediation

Food Preservation and Cooking

Steve Rinella’s Large Game Processing

Steve Rinella’s Small Game

Ball Home Preservation

Charcuterie

Root Cellaring

Art of Natural Cheesemaking

Mastering Artesian Cheese Making

American Farmstead Cheesemaking

Joe Beef: Surviving Apocalypse

Wild Fermentation

Art of Fermentation

Nose to Tail

Artisan Sourdough

Designing Great Beers

The Joy of Home Distilling

Foraging

Southeast Foraging

Boletes

Mushrooms of Carolinas

Mushrooms of Southeastern United States

Mushrooms of the Gulf Coast


Tech

farm and workshop Welding

ultimate guide: plumbing

ultimate guide: wiring

ultimate guide: home repair

off grid solar

Woodworking

Timberframe Construction

Basic Lathework

How to Run A Lathe

Backyard Foundry

Sand Casting

Practical Casting

The Complete Metalsmith

Gears and Cutting Gears

Hardening Tempering and Heat Treatment

Machinery’s Handbook

How to Diagnose and Fix Everything Electronic

Electronics For Inventors

Basic Science


Chemistry

Organic Chem

Understanding Basic Chemistry Through Problem Solving

Ham Radio

AARL Antenna Book

General Class Manual

Tech Class Manual


MISC

Ray Mears Essential Bushcraft

Contact!

Nuclear War Survival Skills

The Knowledge: How to rebuild civilization in the aftermath of a cataclysm

u/meatball07 · 16 pointsr/HomeImprovement

Electrical : Wiring a House: 5th Edition (For Pros By Pros) https://www.amazon.com/dp/162710674X

u/aliston · 10 pointsr/HomeImprovement

+1 “for pros.”

I am taking on a diy rewriting project and found this book to be quite helpful.

https://www.amazon.com/Wiring-House-5th-Pros/dp/162710674X/

That said, I have a degree in electrical engineering, have taken a hands on electrical wiring class at the local community college, and I am still nervous about rewriting our house. It’s not the principles, but a knowledge of electrical codes and “how to do it right” that you might miss as a diy-er.

Right now I’m thinking of hiring someone to check over my work and to rely on the inspector as well. If others have any tips on how to do this safely, it would be much appreciated!

u/BorgesTesla · 9 pointsr/askscience

The difference is one of scale. Electrical machines are big, electronic components are small. Although they obviously share a common base, traditionally they have been two separate areas of study. This is because the scale has a lot of implications.

To quote from Hughes:

Electronic systems have to be considered in the following contexts:

  1. The power levels are very low and therefore energy efficiency may be of less importance.
  2. Even with poor efficiency, the waste heat is rarely significant.
  3. The reduction of distance between circuit components has led to miniaturization.
  4. The outcomes of electronic circuits generally seek exceptionally high levels of accuracy be means of components with poor tolerances.

    Power (electrical) systems have to be considered in the following contexts.

  5. The power levels are high and therefore energy efficiency is most important.
  6. Even with high efficiency, the waste heat is significant and limiting to applications.
  7. The distance to a load is only occasionally significant but generally does not feature.
  8. The outcomes of power systems can be quite variable, yet are achieved using components with high tolerances.
u/siberian · 9 pointsr/HomeImprovement

"Wiring a House" by Caldwell is incredibly useful for any electrical work at all. He goes over everything you need to know from 'This is how electricity works' to 'here is how to rewire your entire house to be above code and pass inspection'. Massive amounts of pictures, circuit diagrams with explanations etc. Just a great book and the standard for electrical DIY.


I rewired my entire 4 bedroom house with this as a reference and that included adding 8 or so circuits and rerouting all electrical for our major kitchen remodel.

u/inagiffy · 8 pointsr/videos

I'm in electronics too, but after 3 or so classes in circuit analysis I think I'm good. If you want a really useful learning and reference book for circuits check this out. Do note that's the 4th edition and they're onto the 5th now, but I've inspected both and they're practically mirror images of one another. Most of the stuff in there has been known for the past 100 years and isn't likely to change anyways.

u/lacrimosoPraeteritus · 6 pointsr/AskElectronics

I don't think you can get by on one book, and I definitely don't think you'll get the "hands on" and theory in one book either. Then there's digital and analog.

You could start with allaboutcircuits.com, a kind of online book. They were alright for me when i started off, but that was a couple years ago. If you want an academic intro to circuits, you could try to look up your nearby university's intro to electronics course and see what book they use (mine used [this]
(http://www.amazon.com/Fundamentals-Electric-Circuits-Charles-Alexander/dp/0073380571/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1457401391&sr=8-2&keywords=Fundamentals+of+Electric+Circuits+4th)).

I'd recommend the academic approach if you want to go to advanced territory, you'll need to learn trigonometry, how to differentiate and integrate. As well as some differential equations and linear algebra.

If you're trying to do this on a budget, you could always buy an older addition of an academic book. The fundamentals usually doesn't change much between editions. You could try the schaums outline books on Circuit Analysis as well, they are cheap. I can't vouch for their accuracy though.

u/eveisdawning · 5 pointsr/vandwellers

Thank you!! We have 600 watts of solar on the roof (which is an obscene amount) and two 200 amp hour sealed lead acid batteries (these guys). Here's the inverter we have.. We basically have standard household appliances: we occasionally use a microwave, we have a toaster, and we have a regular cheapo minifridge. We chose to use our big ol' roof and some space for batteries rather than worrying too much about having the most efficient fridge. Most of the time, though, the solar powers our lights, laptops, and fridge. If you're curious, we found this book very helpful. It's very practical and easy to understand.

As far as the off-grid length:if the batteries have been fully charged on a regular basis, we can live our regular lives (using lights/plugging in laptops) for about three days with little to no sun. If we have good sun, the limiting factor is water. We have 80 gallons of water, and we've found between drinking, eating, washing dishes, and very occasionally ourselves, we can last about two weeks without refilling.

u/uatu2 · 5 pointsr/HomeInspections

Black & Decker The Complete Guide to Wiring is an amazing book for Home Inspectors (and home owners) that explains all of residential electricity including service entrance conductors, sub panels, circuits, electrical converstion etc. Tons of pictures and diagrams.

u/petricup · 4 pointsr/EngineeringStudents

This is what I used for Electric Circuits I. I'd say it was pretty good (and obviously covers all that).

u/[deleted] · 4 pointsr/ECE

Most is just taking an equation and plugging values. But, you need to understand the units being used to understand how things piece together. Linear Algebra helps. An understanding of complex numbers and the z-transform is also beneficial for oscillating systems (AC). Id just pick up a book and go from there.

We used and I'm a huge fan of the book by [Alexander and Sadiku, Fundamentals of Electric Circuits] (https://www.amazon.com/dp/0073380571/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_FG7.zbS3TAFAE)

u/SuaveGerardo · 4 pointsr/utarlington

When I took it a year ago, the examples were sparse and it felt like the course didn't keep up with the labs. In the first week and a half, we were covering physics fundamentals, the syllabus, and the professor's standards in class and in the lab we jumped straight into voltage and current dividers. We had three or four homework assignments and IIRC there was a single circuit in each homework.

My advice is to get a really good fundamentals of electrical engineering book and work as much of that book as possible. I used this book and I found it very helpful. It would be a good idea to watch EE videos on YouTube as well. EEVblog, GreatScott, ElectroBOOM, and bigclive are all good resources.

u/Joshforester · 3 pointsr/electricians
u/Jim-Jones · 3 pointsr/electricians

Price range?

A Leatherman Surge with 40-Bit Assortment, Extension Driver and Saw and File Blades is something she'll keep forever although not specifically electrical.

Ugly's Electrical Reference is something every electrician should have.

u/urbanplowboy · 3 pointsr/DIY

There are several books out there that should help you out with understanding home wiring. Here's one.

The main things you'll need to look into are how to add a circuit breaker and a completely new circuit, how to branch off an existing circuit, how much you're allowed to put on a single circuit, how to properly ground everything, and what kinds of wiring and outlets you should be using where (15A vs. 20A, which wire gauge to use, GFCI, etc). Those are just the things that come to mind, but when you're DIY wiring, it's important to read through a whole book like the one I linked and make sure you're completely comfortable and knowledgeable about the whole process and how everything works. Don't do anything until there's no question in your mind that you're doing it the right way.

u/beniik23 · 3 pointsr/electricians

Color Coded EZ Tabs for the 2017 National Electrical Code https://www.amazon.com/dp/133740201X/ref=cm_sw_r_sms_c_api_i_XErKDbD8ZZX2J

u/LeifCarrotson · 3 pointsr/HomeImprovement

Everyone mentions local codes, but few actually read them. Even fewer are qualified to interpret them. Instead, they're repeating what they've been told by teachers, tradesmen, contractors, and (especially) inspectors, and what they've learned from reading other books and product manuals. It's also a catch-all for possible bad advice: "Check local codes" on /r/DIY is the equivalent of saying "I am not a lawyer" or "check with your doctor".

If you have a strong opinion on something and have been told "it's required by/against code" and want to go look it up, have at it and good luck.

If you want to do a project and make sure it complies with local code, I suggest getting reference materials instead of the original code. Buy a copy of, for example, Wiring Simplified to learn how to do wiring that's compliant with code (that's one I've personally used, it was pretty good). Let an expert read the legalese and translate it into how you ought to implement it.

u/Notevenspecial · 3 pointsr/HomeImprovement

Rex Cauldwell's book is quite thorough:

https://www.amazon.com/Wiring-House-5th-Pros/dp/162710674X

There are cheaper and simpler ones out there, but if you want an all inclusive, this one is very good.

u/Purrsy_Nappington · 3 pointsr/electricians

Just my personal opinions. Learn how to use the Ohms Law Computation Wheel:

http://ohmlaw.com/ohms-law-wheel/

Purchase an Ugly's Electrical Reference, and read it:

https://www.amazon.com/Uglys-Electrical-References-Bartlett-Learning/dp/128411936X

Purchase some GOOD tools.

Learn to bend conduit:

https://dengarden.com/home-improvement/EMT-Electrical-Conduit-Pipe-Bending-Instructions-a-Conduit-Bending-Guide-for-Beginning-Electricians

Learn the NEC.

Listen, observe, anticipate. Don't back stab. Be motivated and have a good work ethic.

u/10percentSinTax · 3 pointsr/electricians

Gotta love that Delmar.

Grab a proximity voltage tester, but don't trust it with your life.

*Please don't go through my reddit history.

u/Do_Work_Son · 3 pointsr/eebooks

Personally, as a current(lol EE jokes) EE undergrad I like to use a lot of reference material that have tons of examples that are worked out so I can not only check my answers, but check my logic as well.

I would highly, highly recommend <Fundamentals of Electric Circuits> - <Charles Alexander and Matthew Sadiku>. I use this book even now in my senior year. There are lots of helpful examples that step you through every iteration of the circuit analysis process. I love this book and I think this will definitely ease you back into electrical engineering.

As a side note, it's very easy to find a pdf of this book online. PM if you're interested in the book, but not necessarily the price;)

u/smokeyjones666 · 3 pointsr/homeautomation

Everyone else has said everything I could say and more so I'll recommend these two things:

  • Buy a copy of Wiring Simplified. A section of the book goes into great detail about conduit and is well worth the (IMO, inexpensive) price of the book alone. Even if you don't touch a single wire in your home yourself the reference is invaluable as it will help you have informed conversations with your contractor.

  • Make sure there is some form of conduit running from the termination point (usually the utility room) to the attic space. Codes will probably require this conduit to be sealed or fireproofed in some way but make sure this is a large diameter conduit. It will be incredibly difficult to predict all future scenarios where wire and data cabling will be needed. Having a conduit running to the attic will allow you to fish cabling to the attic and down through the interior walls into the rooms below.
u/smithandjohnson · 2 pointsr/electricians

This book

Don't let the "For Pros by Pros" tagline scare you. This is super accessible to DIYer's as long as they have the basic know-how.

u/fr00ty · 2 pointsr/HVAC

The EPA is the agency that requires any technician who handles CFC and HCFC refrigerants to be certified. There are 3 levels: type I, II, and III + the core. You need to pass the core and at least one of the 3 levels to get certified. If you pass all 3, you get a universal certification and can pretty much work on anything. The exam itself is issued by approved vendors and proctored at numerous schools and supply houses. You will probably need to get it at some point, but without at least some experience/knowledge in the field, it may be a bit difficult to understand. You can always find/purchase a study guide and take a crack at it.

There are numerous ways to enter the field. Since you have some sales/customer service experience, you might try getting a job at a supply house. This will expose you to what the industry is like. You can also see if they might have any leads for contractors looking for laborers or apprentices.

You also have to keep in mind that this is a pretty diverse field. What are you interested in? Residential HVAC? Commercial refrigeration? Industrial maintenance? Automotive? Appliance repair?

I recommend picking up a copy of Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning. It is pretty much the defacto standard textbook for the trade. Good luck!

u/GuitarGreg · 2 pointsr/electricians

Get this book, I think you would enjoy it and it would probably answer most (if not all) of your questions.

At a certain point you have to just accept that electricity behaves the way it does, just because it does. A lot of the way we talk about electricity is convention, or it makes general assumptions about the way electricity behaves that in most cases are well-founded, so you can get away with them. If you really start to dig, stuff can get weird.

If you want a glimpse of how strange reality can get, read this. It is not directly about electrons but it talks about light so there are some similarities. Plus Feynman is a great author.

u/Lumpyyyyy · 2 pointsr/HomeImprovement

Ignore the advice from that poster. This is incorrect. Black and Decker has an extremely good book for reference. Goes into detail for how to do common electrical jobs and the reasoning behind choices.

u/dsampson92 · 2 pointsr/AskElectronics

>2. If it's not too difficult and something that could be learned over a few months (minus full time work), what sort of subjects, books, pdfs, wikis or other resources would I need to be looking at to get started? I'm a web designer so this isn't really my field... but if there's a specific area of electronics that covers this sort of project, it'd really help to find out.

It is too difficult to do in a few months, but if you are really interested in learning, follow the curriculum of an Electrical Engineering BS. First you need to know calculus, this would be a good place to start, get the used version of course. Alternatively, watch the Khan Academy videos for calculus and find some problems to practice, though this will be less thorough.

Once you have gotten to integrals, start your calculus-based physics education. There is no point in really starting before, as algebra based physics isn't terribly useful for actually understanding things, and you will have to relearn it all with calculus anyways. Halliday and Resnick is a fairly good intro text that includes calculus. The one I linked is just the E&M sections, you can learn the mechanics stuff from Khan -- you just need a cursory understanding of the mechanics. Unfortunately the Khan videos aren't very good for E&M, they are generally too algebra-based. Last I checked he doesn't even cover Gauss's law.

After that you will need some Linear Algebra, Differential Equations, Digital Logic, Circuits, and programming just to round out your fundamentals. Now you are roughly 2 years into a basic ECE curriculum, ignoring a lot of filler courses as necessary.

After this it gets a bit more flexible.

Textbooks on Signals and Systems, Microcontrollers/Microcomputers, Antenna Design, Embedded Devices, Electric Networks, and Digital System Design should round out your education. However that doesn't mean you know what you need to design what you are thinking of -- you also need to get a bunch of real world knowledge and practice. Make a few basic devices, get them manufactured, just to get a feel for the process. Delve into the various IEEE standards and UL standards to learn what you need to do to produce a device that can be sold and will be compatible. You have a lot of research ahead of you, so good luck!

u/kettarma · 2 pointsr/ElectricalEngineering

C+P from another thread on studying for the Power Engineering PE:


http://amzn.to/2dAAjkq - Power PE Reference Manual


http://amzn.to/2eWOyWA - NEC


http://amzn.to/2elb24l - Color coded tabs for NEC (GET THESE)


http://amzn.to/2elcPq7 - Calculation Book


http://amzn.to/2eWLERY - Power PE Study Guide

u/monkeyMan1992 · 2 pointsr/math

A good book, that's also free is Foundations of Signal Processing available for free here.

Though what it sounds like you need is a basic Electric Circuits textbook, such as Fundamentals of Electric Circuits by Alexander & Sadiku is my favourite or even the one by Dorf & Svoboda, in both these textbooks the Fourier Transform is covered in the context of Passive Filter Design, and the chapter on this topic is much later on in the book.

u/anotherlibertarian · 2 pointsr/electricians

Well. First things first, you have to follow the National Electric Code.

I would recommend getting one of these.

That book is over a thousand pages and it deals with just about any conceivable wiring situation.

Now not only do you have to deal with that but you also need to deal with the National Building Code which has it's own things to say about electrical work.

In my state you don't need any sort of license to do electrical work but you do have to have your work inspected by a licensed inspector. (Nobody does this for small jobs, mainly talking about new panels, service, etc)

That's the problem though, every state is different so your state could have loads of ridiculous regulations that you'll have to learn in addition to the NEC and NBC. Some of the things might even contradict each other.


u/wereinz · 2 pointsr/ComputerEngineering

0.
Calculus up to derivatives & integrals

  1. https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0073380571/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1486831188&sr=8-1&pi=AC_SX236_SY340_FMwebp_QL65&keywords=fundamentals+of+electric+circuits&dpPl=1&dpID=510-2S3Hy8L&ref=plSrch
    (Circuit analysis)

  2. https://www.amazon.com/Digital-Design-Nicholas-L-Pappas/dp/0314012303
    (Mixed logic design & Synthesis of circuits)

    Before these I would highly urge that you finish calculus. These two books are what I started with as a hardware engineer @ university (in silicon valley). Then move on to FPGA development. The basic fundamentals are crucial for you to be able to move forward.
u/RogueJello · 2 pointsr/realestateinvesting

For what subjects please?

For electrical "Wiring a Home" by Rex Cauldwell is pretty good.

For Drywall repair this guy is amazing.

For basic carpentry I can't really recommend much, since I've been doing it most of my life, starting with instruction from my dad.

I don't do much plumbing, but mostly it's looking up code, and running pipes. Replacing a toilet/wax ring is all about draining the water, and removing the seal. Almost everything else is about tightening the nuts. If it leaks tighten until it stops.

For roofs, generally if you keep in mind that water is going to run down, then everything else follows from that basic principal. A shingled roof is a PITA to install, but you can do it without too much help.

u/muelleej · 2 pointsr/HomeImprovement

The black and decker wiring book is nice, covers a lot of basics.

u/AvalonNexus · 2 pointsr/electricians

This looks good as well. Not sure if its trial/pay or open source

http://veppa.com/ekts/


I'm not sure if you have the same Motor Control book that I used, but there was a motor control simulator program on CD included. Start/Stop/Run wiring...etc

https://www.amazon.ca/Industrial-Motor-Control-Stephen-Herman/dp/1133691803

u/goosecow · 2 pointsr/ECE

I really liked this text when I was taking circuits:
http://www.amazon.com/Fundamentals-Electric-Circuits-Charles-Alexander/dp/0077263197/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1319959923&sr=1-1

(older versions of the text are good; I used the 3rd edition). Everything is pretty clear & straight forward in that text.

u/FlourCity · 2 pointsr/Rochester

Your insurance company didn't come to inspect either after you bought the house? Maybe my insurance company is weird that it did come and inspect.

Anyways, it's going to be quite expensive. I haven't paid someone to do it, but I have gotten rid of old knob and tube (not being use) and replaced it with proper modern stuff.

What is the power coming into your house like? You have a breaker panel, fuse panel, or what?

If you are the DIY'er type, I would hire someone to install a breaker panel and move all your current circuits to that (I'm assuming you've got fuses). Make sure he installs a breaker panel with enough spaces you can fit all your proposed circuits in. Form there, just pick a room/circuit and re-wire it and then add that to the panel. It's not all that hard, just time consuming. Also, as long as you have half a brain about how electricity works, test wires to make sure they aren't hot (you flipped the breaker already, right?) it's kinda hard to hurt yourself.

Here is a great book.
http://smile.amazon.com/Wiring-House-5th-Pros/dp/162710674X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1463502073&sr=1-1&keywords=wiring+a+house+rex+cauldwell

u/AtheistMessiah · 2 pointsr/electrical

Black & Decker Complete Guide to Wiring. I have the 6th edition, but it makes more sense to get the 7th since it has the most current code changes. It would seem that the other wiring guides are included in this one since it is the "complete" version. I also found this channel to help a whole lot.

u/dapf · 1 pointr/vzla

Le invito a que se lea este libro:
http://www.amazon.com/Lightning-Protection-Iet-Power-Energy/dp/0863417442

Aunque, para entenderlo, va a tener que leerse este:
http://www.amazon.com/Fundamentals-Electric-Circuits-Charles-Alexander/dp/0073380571

Y este:
http://www.amazon.com/Introduction-Electrodynamics-4th-David-Griffiths/dp/0321856562

Si le parece que la inversion de tiempo es demasiada, y si me da por un momento el beneficio de la duda, dejeme decirle que no hay rayo en el mundo que pueda causar un incendo cuando el sistema de pararrayos esta bien diseñado y el mantenimiento es adecuado.

Es lo mismo de la red electrica nacional. Un desastre producto de la falta de mantenimiento y planificacion propia de la 5ta republica.

Ningun sistema aguanta la combinacion de incapacidad mas corrupcion.


Si no me cree a mi, preguntele a un ingeniero amigo suyo. Eso si, si no es chavista es preferible. Las posibilidades de que no sea un pirata son mejores.

u/Xesrac · 1 pointr/electricians

To answer question B: You're in the right place. [The National Electric Code] (https://www.amazon.com/dp/1455912778/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_O.UPzbVRDXYQV) is where we find these answers in the US.

u/gizm770o · 1 pointr/livesound

Ugly's Electrical References is a phenomenal handbook. Filled with all sorts of useful information, including most NEMA connectors and their wiring guides. Definitely worth it.

http://www.amazon.com/Uglys-Electrical-References-2014-Edition/dp/1449690777

u/ihop0 · 1 pointr/HomeImprovement

Any recommendations on this book? Local used book store has a stack for $8 a pop, looked decent enough.

Wiring Complete: Second Edition (Taunton's Complete)

u/oldepharte · 1 pointr/raspberry_pi

A link to another Reddit thread is not exactly authoritative. This smells like the kind of FUD electricians sometimes use to drum up extra business from unsuspecting homeowners. Link directly to a manufacturers data sheet or some other very authoritative source and I might believe it, but I have learned a long time ago that a lot of electricians are either dishonest or incompetent (I have seen "licensed electricians" do some really boneheaded things, like not hooking up the ground wires inside a secondary breaker box. In that particular case, his excuse was he meant to do it, but forgot!).

So if your source is some electrician's site or some electrician's trade group, I will give those sources about zero credibility, half the time all they want to do is sell homeowners stuff they don't need. Not that a breaker can't go bad after two or three uses, in fact they can be bad when brand new, but that is certainly not a normal thing. Electrical inspectors sometimes test breakers using a device that momentarily shorts the line, are they reducing the breaker life by a third when doing that? I don't think so.

P.S. Every homeowner in the USA would do themselves a big favor if they got the book "Wiring Simplified: Based on the 2017 National Electrical Code®" - it's been around for over 80 years but is updated with each revision of the NEC. I bought a copy of a much earllier version at W.T. Grant's when I was about 10 years old and read the whole thing cover to cover, and was fascinated by it (yeah, I was a strange kid). It explains electrical wiring in a way that any handy person can understand. Even if you don't feel confident enough to do some of your own wiring (or your local codes don't allow it), at least you will have some idea of what an electrician is doing and whether they have done the job right. Most booksellers should have it, Amazon's link is at https://www.amazon.com/Wiring-Simplified-Based-National-Electrical/dp/099790531X/

u/geek66 · 1 pointr/ElectricalEngineering

As an EE that work closely with "the trade" for years - be sure to get a copy of Ugly's and the NEC.

Yes KahnAcademy would be good, you need to work the problems, not just read the content.

But the problems faced by a typical electrician - are not really address in circuit theory that EE would take.

I believe the Mike Holt forum can be a good guidance source as well.

u/Wapiti-eater · 1 pointr/ave
u/BubbleLevel · 1 pointr/HomeImprovement

I've found this one to be pretty good. There is a whole series covering other home repair topics, but I haven't had a chance to read those yet.

u/KostaGold · 1 pointr/slavelabour

Hi! I am looking for these two PDF's:

Modern Residential Wiring 10th Edition
ISBN-13: 978-1619608429
I will pay: $15
Amazon Link

National Electrical Code 2014 Handbook (International Electrical Code)
ISBN-13: 978-1455905447
I will pay: $25
Amazon Link

I will pay through paypal, amazon pay, or venmo immediately

u/LegitLlama · 1 pointr/DIY

Ugly's Electrical References is another good one I think

u/ineedmunchies · 1 pointr/ECE

http://library.nu/ can be your friend when all the copies of the text are gone from the library. Also try and look at as many of the recommended text books as possible. You don't have to read them all, but if you're stuck on something then the answer will more than likely be in one of them.

Don't be put off by programming, a simple base grasp of it will be a massive bonus when it comes to looking for jobs. I found the Schaum's books very simple to follow, but that could be different for everyone. Go to the library and find a book you like and follow that as much as possible.

This was the recommended text for a number of modules on my course and for a number of modules at a few other universities I know of. If you've time now before starting it could do no harm to start reading. (Or you might even be able to find the recommended text for your course through your school's page)


u/informatician · 1 pointr/DIY

Just a couple of days ago I received my copy of "Wiring a House" by Rex Cauldwell (http://www.amazon.com/Wiring-House-5th-Pros/dp/162710674X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1412972971&sr=1-1&keywords=wiring+a+house). Though I haven't read it in-depth, I already feel like I can highly recommend it, especially for your situation. He has an approach he calls "Above Code" where he makes recommendations that go a step beyond the code requirements and he points out areas which might vary from location to location. He also specifically addresses many situations that arise when you are doing retrofitting and renovation. The 5th edition was just released and is up-to-date for 2014 code and should be good until 2017.

u/nanowatt · 1 pointr/ECE

Well, if you want to become an engineer, you'll need to go to college. After you get your prereqs out of the way, the first courses you'll take will be something like Circuits 1 and 2, covering RLC circuits and basic transistors, opamps, etc., and a digital course covering logic gates, flip-flops, etc. Later on, you'll get into Fourier and Laplace transforms, more analog and digital, and elective subjects based on your specialization.

Typical books:

Circuits: http://www.amazon.com/Fundamentals-Electric-Circuits-Charles-Alexander/dp/0077263197

Digital Design: http://www.amazon.com/Fundamentals-Logic-Design-Companion-CD-ROM/dp/0495471690

u/SrSkippy · 1 pointr/ECE

If you're in school for EE or to be an electrician, or starting a job as such - Then the NEC is your new best friend. It's well worth the $150 to buy the handbook as well. Lot's of good helpful notes in there...

u/redwhitebike · 1 pointr/Electricity

https://www.amazon.ca/Delmars-Standard-Textbook-Electricity-Stephen/dp/1285852702



this is the book that will take you through it. check out kijiji for a used copy maybe. very logical and in order

u/Eglitarian · 1 pointr/electricians

Maybe this book: https://www.amazon.ca/Industrial-Motor-Control-Stephen-Herman/dp/1133691803

It’s the one we use in trade school in Ontario so it’s a little more simplistic in explanation (geared towards students) but still fairly in depth and covers a lot of the control circuit components (things like RC Timing circuits, diacs, triacs, scrs, zener diodes etc).

Probably a little pricy, but I intend to keep it on a reachable book shelf even after I’m licensed since it’ll make a good reference.

u/DetroitHustlesHarder · 1 pointr/reactiongifs

This Old House on Youtube.
Also, if you like books check out the "For Pros by Pros" book series. I'm learning basic electrical wiring and this book has been indispensable.

u/lookitsaustin · 1 pointr/vandwellers

Will Prowse is a youtuber who has written a book about solar for vehicles. HERE is the link to his book.

u/imightbearobot · 1 pointr/engineering

I am a current EE student right now and saw you ask in another comment about book recommendations so I thought I would throw a few in:

u/hellnoggin · 1 pointr/VanLife

Check out all Will Prowse's vids on YouTube.
He is a bit of a guru on this stuff.

https://www.youtube.com/user/errolprowse

He also has a book on Amazon ->
"Mobile Solar Power made easy"

https://www.amazon.com/Mobile-Solar-Power-Made-yourself-ebook/dp/B0716WGW59/ref=sr_1_1

u/kidcharm86 · 1 pointr/HomeImprovement

Um, 334 is the article for NM, NMC and NMS. Those would be the cables that are being protected.

If you don't own a code book, check out Amazon

u/TurdFlu · 1 pointr/HVAC
u/fallacybuffet · 1 pointr/ECE

Some poking around on Amazon, starting from the page for the Cunningham text recommended by redditor EbilSmurfs which was thoroughly panned by Amazon customer reviews, I found this book. It is Alexander's Fundamentals of Electric Circuits and received almost uniformly 5-star reviews. Most reviewers noted its clarity of exposition, which made it appropriate and useful for self-study. Also noted was the high correlation between material covered in a section and the concepts needed for the section exercises that followed at the end of the chapter. It is a McGraw-Hill textbook, and one reviewer noted that the book format is chapters divided into sections, worked examples after every section, review questions with answers at the end of the chapter, exercises grouped by section also at the end of the chapter, and then more end-of-chapter exercises that combined all the concepts covered in the chapter.

Almost bought it on impulse; added it to my wishlist, instead. While typing this, I noticed that redditor lordloss also recommended this text, which his school uses.

The current 4th edition is $155 at Amazon; the second edition can be had for $12 through Amazon Marketplace; the second edition was also found on Google Books.

Personally, I'm a huge fan of The Art of Electronics.

HTH.

u/Soke · 1 pointr/IWantToLearn

> "Electric circuits" by Nilsson, 9nth edition.

I know absolutely nothing about electronics but Amazon reviews are not liking this book at all.

EDIT: Many reviews are tipping to get this one instead :Fundamentals of Electric Circuits

u/IcyKettle · 1 pointr/HomeImprovement

You bet.

If you want to learn more, this is a great resource: https://www.amazon.com/Wiring-House-Completely-Revised-Updated/dp/162710674X

I got it after buying this 1940 house and learned so much. I hired a pro to install a new panel on day 1, but I've done all subsequent electrical myself, using what's in that book. It's very well written. Cheers.

u/i_wanted_to_say · 1 pointr/DIY

For electrical projects, I love the book Wiring a House, For Pros by Pros
written by Rex Cauldwell.

u/The_MF · 1 pointr/electricians

I recently re-ordered these. I tend to open them up and read them, but ultimately I end up using the conduit bending one most. They'd make a great gift and low-cost.

u/jimjazz1414 · 1 pointr/electricians

If you're doing residential, Wiring a House by Rex Cauldwell is a good non technical supplement to your textbooks

u/SuperAngryGuy · 0 pointsr/microgrowery

No. Code books actually come out every 3 years and they can be pricey. Every 3 years a gathering of engineers, fire marshals and representatives of the insurance industry (more engineers) makes an update. It is the bible to an electrician and there's state and local codes on top of that.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Electrical_Code