i have purchased a small library of manuals from alex....all the cats meow. these never see the garage because i treat them as if they were the original. what i do is i'll scan the pages i need for say the carburetor, print off these pages, and off to the garage. if they get full of grease, gas, or beer, simply toss em and print new ones. but most important is that the actual "blair" manual sits on the shelf ready for the next project. i would reccomend any of alexs' manuals, because he does a top notch job!!!
with the newer vehicles, many of the manuals were on cd from the beginning, which means that if one wants a hard copy, they will have to print from the disk. personally, i have scanned and converted to adobe several of the camt series of manuals, such as the browning hi power, sten, as well as the ww2 standing orders, and clothing equipment statement, but more for the purpose of digitally preserve them. alex, if you ever decide to part with your library, i hope it stays together as a collection, and is still available to the collector....it would be a great loss of historic information otherwise.

mike