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Captives of Conquest: Slavery in the Early Modern Spanish Caribbean (The Early Modern Americas) [Stone, Erin Woodruff] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Captives of Conquest: Slavery in the Early Modern Spanish Caribbean (The Early Modern Americas) Review: Very Thorough, Very High Level - There is not much information on the internet about this book, so I am going to summarize it's contents as succinctly as possible. I ordered this book a couple of weeks ago and it is not EXACTLY what I was expecting, but it's still good. First off, it is written for professional engineers and/or graduate students. It assumes you already know/remember a lot of trigonometry and the basics of electricity and physics. If you're looking for an introduction or how-to manual for installing PV, this is NOT it. As stated in the description, this book goes into great depth of the WHY and HOW everything works, down to the chemistry of how a battery charges/discharges. It is very thorough. Also, nothing is dumbed down. They do not try to make it easy to read. Which is not a bad thing in my mind, just letting everyone know. I don't have an engineering background, but I'm still working through it, with LOTS of help from the web. When I'm done, I'll definitely have a good understanding of everything (if I make it) covered in the book. Lastly, you can't preview the book or see the table of contents, so I thought I'd quickly add them here at the bottom, just so people know what is covered. Ch 1 - Background Ch 2 - The Sun Ch 3 - Introduction to PV Systems Ch 4 - Grid-Connected Utility-Interactive PV Systems Ch 5 - Mechanical Considerations Ch 6 - Battery-Backup Grid-Connected PV Systems Ch 7 - Stand-Alone PV Systems Ch 8 - Economic Considerations Ch 9 -Externalities and Photovoltaics Ch 10 - The Physics of PV Cells Ch 11 - Present and Proposed PV Cells and Systems Review: Recommended for Electrical Engineers - Very informative book about PV systems, design and thoughts behind it. Its not a DIY on how to mount solar panels, but more of an engineering informative book, with alot of background information and details / aspects to consider regarding PV systems.
| Best Sellers Rank | #4,189,208 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #2,765 in Caribbean History #5,753 in Indigenous History #8,483 in Discrimination & Racism |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (23) |
| Dimensions | 6 x 0.8 x 9.1 inches |
| Edition | 3rd |
| ISBN-10 | 1439802920 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1439802922 |
| Item Weight | 1.85 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 288 pages |
| Publication date | June 11, 2021 |
| Publisher | University of Pennsylvania Press |
R**N
Very Thorough, Very High Level
There is not much information on the internet about this book, so I am going to summarize it's contents as succinctly as possible. I ordered this book a couple of weeks ago and it is not EXACTLY what I was expecting, but it's still good. First off, it is written for professional engineers and/or graduate students. It assumes you already know/remember a lot of trigonometry and the basics of electricity and physics. If you're looking for an introduction or how-to manual for installing PV, this is NOT it. As stated in the description, this book goes into great depth of the WHY and HOW everything works, down to the chemistry of how a battery charges/discharges. It is very thorough. Also, nothing is dumbed down. They do not try to make it easy to read. Which is not a bad thing in my mind, just letting everyone know. I don't have an engineering background, but I'm still working through it, with LOTS of help from the web. When I'm done, I'll definitely have a good understanding of everything (if I make it) covered in the book. Lastly, you can't preview the book or see the table of contents, so I thought I'd quickly add them here at the bottom, just so people know what is covered. Ch 1 - Background Ch 2 - The Sun Ch 3 - Introduction to PV Systems Ch 4 - Grid-Connected Utility-Interactive PV Systems Ch 5 - Mechanical Considerations Ch 6 - Battery-Backup Grid-Connected PV Systems Ch 7 - Stand-Alone PV Systems Ch 8 - Economic Considerations Ch 9 -Externalities and Photovoltaics Ch 10 - The Physics of PV Cells Ch 11 - Present and Proposed PV Cells and Systems
P**N
Recommended for Electrical Engineers
Very informative book about PV systems, design and thoughts behind it. Its not a DIY on how to mount solar panels, but more of an engineering informative book, with alot of background information and details / aspects to consider regarding PV systems.
E**H
Solar Photovoltaic
The book is excellent. Answers to questions would be nice. Mathematics and formulas explained in laymen's terms can be added.
A**R
must have for people studying about photovoltaics. This book ...
must have for people studying about photovoltaics. This book has helped me with two reports and one course until now.
R**W
Poor material for pv engineering
A really inferior text book. The author simply add up the knowledge and project report he has to make up a book. For an electrical engineer, most of the materials are unnecessary. For a layman, the content is verbose and elusive. This is the textbook for my class and I don't even bother to buy one.
)**)
Comprehensive Introduction
This is a great intro book for those wanting a well rounded overview of Photovoltaic Systems design and installation. Practicing engineers of all disciplines will find the material contained in this text useful and current.
A**R
Five Stars
A very useful book to become familiar with the PV, battery, and micro-grid
N**H
Still writtin in inches? when are you going to learn some metrics
Excellent book but why use inches and not use the metric system is better and is the world science metric system as an engineering book should be written in a metric system. Americans will never learn metric if authors don t start writting with it.
M**Z
It is a reference book for all who has involved solar business. Worked examples make it very easy to design different type of solar systems from draft. As a european reader i had to use my unit converter so frequently but still i liked it very much
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