Vendeur : WorldofBooks, Goring-By-Sea, WS, Royaume-Uni
Paperback. Etat : Very Good. The book has been read, but is in excellent condition. Pages are intact and not marred by notes or highlighting. The spine remains undamaged. N° de réf. du vendeur GOR001371348
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Vendeur : Anybook.com, Lincoln, Royaume-Uni
Etat : Fair. This is an ex-library book and may have the usual library/used-book markings inside.This book has soft covers. In fair condition, suitable as a study copy. Please note the Image in this listing is a stock photo and may not match the covers of the actual item,350grams, ISBN:0713132302. N° de réf. du vendeur 8611577
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Vendeur : Crappy Old Books, Barry, Royaume-Uni
Paperback. Etat : Fair. Behold: Motor Vehicle Calculations and Science 1 by Champion and Arnold, a book from 1971 that comes at you in full emergency-red seriousness, as if motoring itself were a matter of national importance and you had better sit down immediately to calculate a gear ratio before somebody gets hurt. This is not a glossy coffee-table celebration of glamorous cars, nor is it one of those modern manuals that assumes a computer will do the thinking while you stand nearby holding a socket set. No, this is a proper old-school technical textbook from the age when ?motor vehicle science? sounded both noble and faintly threatening. It belongs to that vanished educational world of workshops, graph paper, overalls, chalk dust, and the firm belief that a young person should be able to explain torque, force, pressure, motion and probably civilisation itself before being allowed anywhere near an engine block. And what a cover it has. That bold red wrapper does not whisper. It announces. It warns. It suggests that somewhere inside are equations capable of reducing overconfidence to rubble. The jaunty little car on the front appears to be leaning dramatically, perhaps because it has just encountered the contents of Chapter One. The white arrows only add to the sense that this is less a book and more an official investigation into what, exactly, a vehicle thinks it is doing. As sold by Crappy Old Books, this copy is in fair condition , which in the case of a 1971 motoring textbook feels exactly right. A book like this should not look pampered. It should look as though it has spent time in the company of apprentices, workshop benches, tea mugs, and men called Keith. There are slight annotations on the covers and inside front pages, which only improve its credentials. Nothing says ?genuine educational survivor? like the faint evidence that someone, at some point, felt moved to write on it. Happily, the main pages are mostly free from helpful scribbles, so the great mechanical truths within remain largely uncorrupted by the panicked pencil of a student trying to work out something involving SI units five minutes before a test. And yes, SI units are proudly mentioned right there on the front, because this was an era when metrication itself still had the thrilling air of a technological future. Somewhere in these pages lies a Britain carefully converting, measuring, standardising and trying, with varying degrees of enthusiasm, to drag the internal combustion engine into a more rational age. It is a wonderful reminder that the future once arrived not through apps and disruption, but through sturdy textbooks explaining Newtons to people in industrial estates. The title, meanwhile, is gloriously honest. Calculations and Science. Not dreams. Not lifestyle. Not ?motoring passion.? Calculations. Science. A title so uncompromising it practically smells of cold metal and determination. It promises numbers, principles, and the sobering revelation that the family saloon is, underneath the chrome and aspiration, merely a collection of forces behaving according to rules. There is something almost poetic about that. Behind every cheerful drive to the shops lurks mathematics. Naturally, this makes it an absolute treasure for the right sort of reader. If you collect vintage technical books, automotive ephemera, workshop literature, or relics from the era when Britain still believed in training people to understand machinery properly, this is a lovely piece. It would also suit anyone who enjoys books that seem to have escaped from a polytechnic storeroom, or who likes their nostalgia flavoured with engineering diagrams rather than pop lyrics. It is also, let us be honest, deeply funny in the best possible way. Not because the book itself is trying to be funny, but because it is so magnificently sincere. Modern publishing would never dare to issue something this plainspoken. Today it would be called The Ultimate Illustrated Automotive Systems Companion and feature glowing blurbs, QR codes and a man in wraparound glasses smiling beside an electric crossover. This book simply turns up in red and tells you that vehicles can be calculated, science exists, and you will now get on with it. So here we have a handsome, slightly battle-worn, lightly annotated veteran of the educational motor trade: part textbook, part workshop ghost, part monument to an age when learning meant mastering the exact angle at which a diagrammatic car might lean on a slope. It may not make you cooler, richer or better looking, but it will place on your shelf a splendidly no-nonsense fragment of 1970s technical Britain. Motor Vehicle Calculations and Science 1 is the sort of book that makes you feel you ought to own a slide rule, an oily rag, and a stronger opinion about compression ratios. Which, for a fair-condition paperback from Crappy Old Books, is really rather a lot to ask ? and somehow, magnificently, it still manages it. N° de réf. du vendeur 5876
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Vendeur : Books & Bygones, Reading, Royaume-Uni
Paperback. Etat : Poor. 260 pages. Back cover damaged, otherwise good with no inscriptions. Size: 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall. Book. N° de réf. du vendeur 27509
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)