Means Repair and Remodeling Cost Data 2002


Book Description

Designed to fulfill a wide variety of needs, it is as helpful to the builder doing small-scale remodeling jobs as it is to the facility manager needing costs and time estimates for building renovations. It's the most versatile, easy-to-use cost and bidding reference available.The 2002 Reference Section provides the depth of technical detail to estimate projects with precision and expertise... invaluable supplemental information not provided in any other cost publication.What you'll find in the 2002 edition: -- Over 17,000 unit prices completely updated for 2002 -- material, labor, and equipment plus productivity information including labor hours and daily output -- Expanded information relevant to historic restoration and renovation including windows, doors, millwork, and surface preparation. -- 90 assemblies with over 4300 variations for accurate conceptual stage estimating. -- Plus: The latest 2002 costs for crews and equipment. Easy-to-use city cost adjustment factors for 316 metropolitan areas in the U.S. and Canada, plus Location Factors for quick indexing to all 3-digit zip code sectional centers in the U.S. and selected locations in Canada. -- Critical tips on change order estimating. Easy-to-find identification of handicapped access costs. Exhaustive reference information. Estimating tips. Easy-to-use index. -- Now conforms to the latest CSI MasterFormat Master List of Numbers and Titles for Unit Prices, and UNIFORMAT II numbering system for the Assemblies section.
















RESIDENTIAL SQUARE FOOT C-2001


Book Description




Electric Power Research Trends


Book Description

The world is becoming increasingly electrified. For the foreseeable future, coal will continue to be the dominant fuel used for electric power production. The low cost and abundance of coal is one of the primary reasons for this. Electric power transmission, a process in the delivery of electricity to consumers, is the bulk transfer of electrical power. Typically, power transmission is between the power plant and a substation near a populated area. Electricity distribution is the delivery from the substation to the consumers. Due to the large amount of power involved, transmission normally takes place at high voltage (110 kV or above). Electricity is usually transmitted over long distance through overhead power transmission lines. Underground power transmission is used only in densely populated areas due to its high cost of installation and maintenance, and because the high reactive power gain produces large charging currents and difficulties in voltage management. A power transmission system is sometimes referred to colloquially as a "grid"; however, for reasons of economy, the network is rarely a true grid. Redundant paths and lines are provided so that power can be routed from any power plant to any load centre, through a variety of routes, based on the economics of the transmission path and the cost of power. Much analysis is done by transmission companies to determine the maximum reliable capacity of each line, which, due to system stability considerations, may be less than the physical or thermal limit of the line. Deregulation of electricity companies in many countries has led to renewed interest in reliable economic design of transmission networks. This new book presents leading-edge research on electric power and its generation, transmission and efficiency.