December 1, 2008
Electricity4Gas Review
Electricity 4 Gas is an e-book that gives you step by step instructions for constructing your own electric car for around $300, as opposed to spending $3000 or more for a professional conversion.
Who is Electricity4Gas for?
The simple answer to that is anyone with an interest in protecting the environment for our children and our children’s children while saving themselves a great deal of money at the same time.
Following the simple instructions in the manual does not require anything other than the most basic of mechanical or engineering skills – if you can use a spanner and a screwdriver, you will be able to do this. Using any donor vehicle, the engine should cost around $300, which would allow you to drive for up to 100 miles at speeds of up to 50 mph on one single $1.00 electrical recharge.
While you are driving around your own neighborhood, you never need to spend another cent on gasoline, and as anyone with any knowledge of automobiles knows, it is urban driving that is the most expensive and the most heavily polluting.
First impressions…
Being someone who is interested in both cars and the environment, I read this manual in one sitting, and the first thing to say is that it is far simpler to build an electric car than you could ever possibly imagine. Because it is possible to get all the parts you need cheap or even sometimes for free, you can do the whole job yourself relatively quickly for around about 10% of the cost of having your car professionally converted to run on electricity.
Bad points…
As far as the instruction manual itself is concerned, there really are no bad points. Everything is explained in very straightforward, basic English, so it couldn’t be simpler.
In the case of your electric vehicle, there are still one or two potential downsides. With a radius of only 100 miles before a recharge is needed, you cannot set off on any longer journeys without knowing that there will be places where you can recharge the vehicle on the way.
Similarly, while a top speed of 50 miles an hour is probably considerably quicker than most people would imagine an electric car could travel, it is still going to be a bit dangerous to drive on a highway or expressway.
Good points…
As suggested, the best thing about the instruction manual is that it is extremely easy to understand even if you are someone with no mechanical or electrical knowledge. Then, you might have to read the manual two to three times to make complete sense of everything, but I have no doubt whatsoever that you would be able to do so.
The manual is also written by someone who obviously has a genuine concern for the environment and the world around him, which clearly comes over in the way the manual has been written.
As far as your electric car is concerned, the advantages are significant and far-reaching. Firstly, you completely wipe out gasoline bills when you are driving round the town, which over the course of a year could save you thousands of dollars. Secondly, your car will ‘burn’ electricity rather than gasoline, and that means that you are no longer pushing any pollutants at all out into the atmosphere.
You know that while the politicians and leaders pay lip service to the idea of protecting the environment, you are doing everything possible to act, and saving yourself a great deal of money at the same time.
If you’re based in the USA, the IRS will give you significant tax breaks for running an electric car as well, so that is another way that you will keep extra cash in your pocket from building your own electric car.
Electricity4Gas Summary
Whilst manuals that will teach you how to build hybrid vehicles that you can run on gasoline and water are becoming increasingly common, this is the only e-book I know of that teaches you how to build your own electric vehicle. It’s a no-brainer. Invest in the manual, build yourself an electric motor and start saving hundreds or thousands of dollars immediately.
Reviewed Website: www.electricity4gas.com
Filed under Automotive by Ron







Comments on Electricity4Gas Review »
You must have got a different manual than I did. The one I got had less information on it than I had already found on the web for free. Step by step instructions, yeah right. Here they are:
1. go buy cheap small car with sound body.
2. go buy a bunch of electric vehicle stuff.
3. strip out car of all fuel engined components.
4. put in all electric components.
5. drive away.
simple, why didn't I think of that?