Prince George Vintage Motorcycle Club

General Category => General Discussion => Topic started by: fj1200 on March 16, 2012, 01:25:11 AM

Title: Trade shop manual
Post by: fj1200 on March 16, 2012, 01:25:11 AM
I have a shop manual for unit construction 650/750 triumphs printed by Haynes, that I would like to trade for a shop manual for 1982  xs650.  Anyone interested?
Title: Re: Trade shop manual
Post by: Fritz on March 16, 2012, 01:43:06 AM
Sounds like a Great deal.......
.....I have a 73-76 Suzuki GT 125-185 Twin Haynes Manual  that can be traded for an 82 XS650 Manual and will trade it again to you for the Triumph manual    ;D
...Rusty Bucket must have a few of those books kicking around his shop.... :o

[attachment deleted by admin due to full attachment storage]
Title: Re: Trade shop manual
Post by: fj1200 on March 16, 2012, 11:11:10 AM
Sounds good to me. Do you want a first edition 196? or a second edition 197? I have both.

Just checked they are both 73's.
Title: Re: Trade shop manual
Post by: Rusty Bucket on March 16, 2012, 11:30:18 AM
Remember, Gary has all the Yamaha manuals - and I don't think there were XS650 manuals, though I'm not certain about that.  Gary might be williing to swap an XS650 manual for a Triumph manual, if he had one; so calling Gary is the thing to do.
Title: Re: Trade shop manual
Post by: fj1200 on March 16, 2012, 12:06:00 PM
To my recollection there were none in the library. Only on your book shelf. I did download a pdf manual ...better than nothing,but not by much. I prefer the feel of dead trees. After all we live in what was once called the "spruce capitol of the world".
Title: Re: Trade shop manual
Post by: fast1 on March 16, 2012, 02:02:49 PM
  A properly stored book can still be read a 100 years later. Never seen a computer last more than 5 yrs. I also hate electronic parts and service manuals. They suck.
Title: Re: Trade shop manual
Post by: fj1200 on March 16, 2012, 02:16:54 PM
True.   Just sold a book last wkend that was over 100 yrs old. 
Title: Re: Trade shop manual
Post by: Theo on March 16, 2012, 06:05:23 PM
I would agree that a paper manual is generally nicer to work with, but an electronic version has the advantage of easy searchability. So, why not print off the PDF manual? Then you would have the best of both worlds. Further, when the paper version gets all dirty and greasy from handling in the shop, you can simply reprint it.
Title: Re: Trade shop manual
Post by: Billy Thunder on March 16, 2012, 07:43:01 PM
I always use those grease marks on the edge of the book pages as an index...lol. Easy to find that area of the manual that gets used most.
Title: Re: Trade shop manual
Post by: Hans on March 16, 2012, 08:50:16 PM
Manual, we don't need no steenking manual.