Rayyan didn’t question his luck. He dove in. He studied the equivalent circuit of a transformer until 3 AM. He traced the phasor diagram of a synchronous motor on a napkin. The PDF became his lifeline, his late-night mentor. He passed the exam—scored a respectable 78%—and graduated six months later.
Then he noticed the metadata. The file had been uploaded to the server by a retired chief engineer—a man named Fazal Ahmed, employee code EE-07.
He smiled at the memory.
Fazal had uploaded it years ago, not for piracy, but for the night-shift technicians who couldn’t afford the book. The link had somehow leaked to the web.
His heart thumped. He clicked.
In the description, he wrote: "For those who need it most. Study hard. Pass it on."
The first three links were traps: pop-ups promising "Free Instant Access!" but delivering only dodgy surveys and browser warnings. He was about to give up when he saw the fourth result: a clean, unassuming Google Drive link shared by a user named "fazal_ee_07". ashfaq hussain electrical machines pdf drive
Years passed. Rayyan became a junior engineer at a power distribution company. One rainy evening, while clearing out old files from the company’s shared server, he found a forgotten folder labeled "Legacy Resources." Inside was a dusty collection of old manuals, scanned diagrams… and a copy of Ashfaq Hussain’s Electrical Machines .
He hit Enter.
The PDF bloomed on his screen. Crisp, searchable, and complete—all 800+ pages of transformers, induction motors, and synchronous generators. It was a digital oasis.
The night before his semester exams, Rayyan’s laptop screen glowed like a faint sun in his dark hostel room. His friend’s notes didn’t make sense. His own scrawls were a disaster. But the real crisis? The "Electrical Machines" textbook by Ashfaq Hussain—a thick, blue-jacketed legend—had vanished from the library three days ago, and the only other copy was clutched in the iron grip of the class topper. Rayyan didn’t question his luck