Re: manuals?
Hi rwise<br /> Thank you for the chance to once again climb on my soap box and preach. Really the best manual for you is the one you are most comfortable with, the one you feel you can understand best, the you will read. I have never had a Glenns manual so I can't comment on that one. The Clymer and Seloc books are both exellent and I'd be willing to bet that your Glenn's is probably right there as well. I own a fairly good library of outboard manuals and info dating from post WWII to about 1990. Alot of this info is OEM. I fill in the gaps with either Clymer or Seloc or a few other after market manuals I have. I read a lot of complaining on this board about this manual or that. You know "My so and so manual is wrong, it's no good", and so on. The fact is 99.9% of this is because the reader does not understand what they are reading, or didn't read it through in the first place. I have manuals about a lot of things that I do not understand. These books are useless to me right now. Maybe some day when I decide to build a neuclar power plant or a computer they will come in handy.