M
Michael A. Terrell
Guest
jurb6006@gmail.com wrote:
They ended up with the huge collection of OEM manuals the NRI had,
when that school was shut down by McGraw-Hill. I once asked about
information on a 1938 Philco tombstone radio from NRI, and they mailed
me an original service manual for free, since I had taken a course at
one time.
Sams only reverse engineered items that sold in excess of 20 thousand
units, but they collected OEM data on everything they could get their
hands on. They also wrote manuals for some company's products that
didn't meet the 20K unit minimum. Those were only available from the
OEMs.
Paying for the manual would be alright if I was working on it here. But for someone on the web at random, no. Can't do that.
Thanks anyway. Maybe the OP wants it though.
Interesting that is an OEM manual they say. Usually they generated their own. Are they like a licensed reseller or something now ? they used to reverse engineer almost everything, but I know that has gotten more difficult by orders of magnitude.
They ended up with the huge collection of OEM manuals the NRI had,
when that school was shut down by McGraw-Hill. I once asked about
information on a 1938 Philco tombstone radio from NRI, and they mailed
me an original service manual for free, since I had taken a course at
one time.
Sams only reverse engineered items that sold in excess of 20 thousand
units, but they collected OEM data on everything they could get their
hands on. They also wrote manuals for some company's products that
didn't meet the 20K unit minimum. Those were only available from the
OEMs.