I will post another message here in this thread that I wrote to one of the yahoo audio groups that will explain the HiFi Engine problems better (as I see it).
StereoManuals.com posted this Pioneer PDF Library page on 8-6-2014…
http://www.stereomanuals.com/man/pdf/pioneer/StereoManuals.com_Pioneer-PDF-Library.txt
Notice was sent to some friends, some techs, some yahoo groups. Mike, the moderator on the vintageclassicaudio yahoo group responded (bottom of this message) about some things and mentioned “quality free service manual downloads” and an example of HiFi Engine having a huge database of manuals, etc. This prompted Rick to respond at length about particular issues regarding HiFi Engine files.
Mike,
I basically agree with your assessment. It’s many things including aging demographics, bad economy (and it's really bad for a lot of folks), less folks interested in vintage audio gear and being satisfied with mp3 files, steaming audio/video on their phones, etc. There are long term trends about many things that is causing huge numbers of folks being satisfied with "good enough" and are not so much interested in Very Good and Excellent. Regarding printed repro manuals. From the beginning in 2001, I did of course want to make money. But also important was the desire to produce something for fans of vintage audio that would really please them. That's still important to me. But due to various factors, it has increasingly become something that looks to be on a downhill slide with little hope of improvement.
The single biggest factor has been the rise of pdf files being fairly easy to find for almost all the "popularly" sold vintage audio models. I completely understand that and do NOT fault people for going for free as opposed to spending any money at all. That is just human nature, particularly in a bad economy. But the result is that I no longer have most sales for printed repro manuals be for the popularly sold equipment. Much of it now is for things that can't be found as a free pdf somewhere, such as an oddball Yorx mini system, a GE clock radio, a Tascam microphone, etc.
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"There are many sites offering quality free service manual downloads.
One example is Hi Fi engine has a huge data base of stereo manuals"
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Generic statements such as above are just fine and dandy for the casual person who wants to find a manual now and then. I mean, free is free and it's tough to justify bitching by anybody who is getting something for free. I would certainly not agree with the statement that most of them are "quality" such as you did. Some are of course, but much more of them are "adequate" at best and almost all are a far cry from what I would call "quality". Many are just horrible.
HOWEVER, the issue I was addressing about the huge Pioneer library I put together was targeted at the person who for whatever reason has the need or the desire to have a very large library of manuals., For that person it's a whole different story. One will almost immediately begin to get very very frustrated in trying to locate the files, get access to them faster than 2 per day, or 15 per day, or on a site that is in a language they can understand, or from a site that requires you to post messages in a forum, make donations, earn "points", upload files according to some upload /download ration, and many other myriad "gates". To acquire a really large library, one might end up spending hundreds or thousands of hours of their time.
Let me tell you some stuff about HiFi Engine. Some reading this may interpret it as bitching and complaining. I DON'T because that's not what is it. The guy who runs it provides a valuable service that benefits a lot of people and it's free. So bitching hardly seems appropriate. I will note that he probably makes more money from Google ads than perhaps 75% of the remaining "manuals vendors" sites are producing.
But here are some facts. First, he does not have a HUGE data base of manuals. The site says he has less than 20,000 "documents". When you look deeper and realize that many many of the Service Manuals are intentionally broken up into separate files, the real total is much much less.
I have half a million files… although I have not done much of anything over the years to distribute them.
It seems like a lot to most people who are casual observers because most of them are for equipment models that sold in large quantities and are the common equipment that most folks have. So it seems like they have "everything". Next, virtually everything there was sent to him by someone instead of locating them himself. So that's an easy thing to do. Next, almost all files are processed in some fashion that usually results in reduced file size and often reduced readability. Sometimes it improves readability. I assume the purpose is often geared toward reducing bandwidth costs for the downloads.
Next, almost all files have the first page being an added advertisement page so you can't see the manual cover. Some have footers added. The vast majority have been PASSWORD LOCKED and have stupid initial view settings that cause your pdf reader program to jump to the middle of your screen whether that is what you want or not and usually some other stupid "zoom" setting so that you can only see a partial page. You can not extract a page, add a page, rearrange pages, fix rotation errors, etc. and there is nothing you can do to fix it unless you have the ability to remove the pass word locking. In addition to that, many of the manuals are intentionally broken up into separate files. I have no idea the thinking behind that unless it's just to make it appear that there is more "documents" being offered. Unless password locking can be removed one can't put the manual back together as designed by the companies. Oh, and one final thing, that is the site that often crops off the bottom of the front cover of some Pioneer manuals so the company information, dates, and copyright information is not visible. Then on his FAQ page, he claims to own the copyrights on all the manuals. Sorry, but that is a crock of shit.
Just before replying to this message, I decided to go to the HiFiEngine Pioneer page and pick a random late 70's receiver service manual. I picked SX-1280. Pioneer made the manual with pages numbered from 1 to 88, plus they added large poster-size schematics. Inside the original manual are pages 81 - 88 which they called "additional manual" although it is printed right into the entire manual.
The HiFiEngine site owner has broken the file up into 3 separate files for no understandable reason. The file called "service manual" abruptly stops at page 40 for no understandable reason. The separate file called "schematics" (but is also PCB and Parts Lists) begins the manual again starting with page 41 and goes to page 80 where it stops again for no understandable reason. The file called "additional" starts again at page 81 and goes to page 89, then the manual’s back cover.
The total size of the 3 "manuals" is about 12MB. Since the 3 files are pass word locked, you can't recombine them. Why would he do that on a consistent and regular basis? The only thing I can figure is like the example I gave in my long Pioneer PDF Library story... Not only do you get the car frame, you also get the body, and the engine, and the wheels... with tires.
So then these various mangled files from his site and many others get picked up and redistributed around on other sites and often with new and different file names. Fairly soon, about all folks can find are these frequently mangled and misnamed files. These are just A FEW of the issues I decided to address for the person who for whatever reason wants a huge Pioneer PDF library.
My Pioneer SX-1280 PDF service manual file is 40.3MB and is one single file and has all pages in order from beginning to end. It is NOT password locked. It has no ridiculous initial page view settings. It is 123 screen pages. It includes extra different page size versions for several of the larger foldout pages. It includes numerous high resolution full-color scanned pages the PCB pages as Pioneer produced it, instead of b/w. It includes additional scan versions, resolutions, and sizes for the various schematics pages. It also includes high resolution scans of the original extra poster-size schematics Pioneer originally delivered with the physical manual.
I decided to make this long post because while free is great, it's often not the best solution... but it very well may be adequate for most average folks.
This has taken a long time to write. I'm tired. I'm outta here.
Best regards,
Rick
http://www.stereomanuals.com
From:
vintageclassicstereo@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, August 06, 2014 5:25 PM
Subject: Re: StereoManuals Pioneer PDF Library
There are a few factors regarding service manual sales. The demand for service manuals is down in part do the nation wide service centers closing. There are less people doing service work these days. Many are in other work fields. TV/Electronic services business is very unprofitable and thus shops are closing in massive numbers nation wide here in the USA and I am sure in other parts of the world. Also many owners are retiring and there are no replacement technicians entering the Field.
The second issue.
There are many sites offering quality free service manual downloads.
One example is Hi Fi engine has a huge data base of stereo manuals
That said I have converted my TV shop to vintage audio repair. There is a growing demand for vintage audio repair including stereo receivers and turntables. Console stereo is very popular now with a whole new generation of people into vinyl. So give it time and thing may turn around especially with hard to find manuals.
Mike
Vinatgeclassicstereos Yahoo Groups