Don't disagree, just trying to make the problem a bit more quickly solvable.
I use this with most of my PDF manuals. I print the schemats full sized when needed and keep the collection. I can always o to the PDFs when needed.
Cheers!
Bruce
Quoting Matt Huszagh <huszaghmatt@...>:
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"Bruce" <bruce@...> writes:
There is a rather simple solution: Scan only the oversized pages.
Typically, the theory sections only change slightly over the life of
an instrument. You could scan some of the sections referring to
debugging techniques that changed over the life of the instrument and
possibly the updates section. No need to scan the entire manual.
In theory, yes, but I think it's preferable to scan the entire manuals
for 2 reasons:
1. The rest of the pages are easy to scan and it would be nice for all
the page numbers to line up. It's really nice to have consistent,
complete, high-quality manuals and I think this is worth a bit of extra
effort up front.
2. The 8663A manual is a bit weird and is incomplete in some
respects. For instance, parts the digital troubleshooting section say to
refer to signature analysis codes, but these aren't actually provided
anywhere in the manual. There's a chance these were added in this
manual. We could look for these specifically, but it would be a shame to
find out at some later point that there was another omission in the
earlier manual revisions that we'd missed the opportunity to scan.
Matt