safepic
10-15-2006, 05:32 PM
Had an interesting discussion with people from the auto industry. The discussion was about the corvette's manual. Just wanted to see if I could win some beers.
SafePIC
98 C-5
If you ain't on the edge, your taking up too much space.
C3 Starship
10-16-2006, 01:17 PM
Search engines or videos just won't lay out on the bench, and won't move to the car easily.
Damn monitor keeps falling off the fender.:D:D:D
safepic
10-16-2006, 02:50 PM
Need to get that 52' plasma screen for the garage to display it then. That way you can tell your loved ones " its to keep your cars and you safe. You don't want to endanger anyone, do you?";)
Ed
98 C-5
If you ain't on the edge, your taking up too much space.
C3 Starship
10-16-2006, 03:00 PM
:D:D:D
How about a projetion unit, so I can cover the whole wall? :D;)
I do prefer the Chevrolet shop manual, and the Corvette assembly manual, to any others.;)
(and a plethera of cataloges)
gorichb
10-25-2006, 08:21 PM
I think a well written manual is a great non-tool to have. There is quite a bit of good information in the Corvette manual.
Notorious
06-25-2007, 11:22 PM
I wouldn't be without a factory manual simply because there's info there that you can't find anywhere else. That being said though, they're generally laid out very poorly. I've used factory manuals for a multitude of vehicles over the years and most waste a lot of time finding pertinent and related info when troubleshooting. A few have impressed me but very few.
I have several C4 manuals for various years including for my '95. Among these I have a '96 manual. It underwent major revisions and was substantially improved over the '95 version. Still room for improvement but definitely better.
code918
08-02-2007, 02:10 PM
Because this is the first Vette that I've ever owned, I use the manual all the time to learn what all the buttons and settings are!