This book is designed to increase your competencies in the scope of residential wiring. This book is also formatted to the traditional semester term, but can be modified to accommodate different semester formats. Furthermore, users of this edition can search different sources for answers to the given questions/statements. It is the goal of the author to create a supplemental workbook that is realistic and that will build a solid foundation of electrical knowledge for the student to be successful in the building trades.Each week will have sixty (60) questions. The subject of the questions might not follow the sequence of the instructor’s lectures or labs, but will allow the student to become familiar with other sources or resources to answer the given questions. A Signature assignment has been added to this book as a practical exercise in cost estimating projects. This exercise is at the instructor’s discretion, but if the instructor wants the student to try this exercise then that instructor will have to supply the working drawing or plans to the student.Finally, the author recommends that this book be used as a reference tool by the student. There are places in the book for students to write or make notes from lectures, labs, or job sites. Remember, the electrical trades such as residential wiring requires you keep your skills up to date.
Brian Nelson graduated from Cambridge and Oxford, teaching philosophy and cultural studies in Paris and Wales.
Since the 1980s, Nelson has taught at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, on French literature and cultural studies. From 2008 he has been Professor Emeritus of French Studies. Nelson also edits the Australian Journal of French Studies.
As well as his critical writings on French literature, Nelson has been one of the core translators of Oxford World's Classics' projects to translate all of Emile Zola's "Rougon-Macquart" cycle. Nelson translated 8 of the 20 books between 1995 and 2021 as part of their complete series.