I think a simple solution is anyone that gets a free manual has to
scan it and upload it to BAMA or some other free manual website.

Nice in theory. Unlikely to work in practice, IMO.

BAMA is a laudible effort, but in practice many documents aree not
well scanned and some are nearly useless.

It is unrealistic to expect one person to scan filing cabinets worth
of manuals, but to spread the task around makes sense.

Dave has done it.

YMMV,

-John

BAMA is kinda strange nowadays. According to the note on the edebris mirror page, the main BAMA site has been down for "repairs and upgrades" since 9/17/2009; almost 2 years ago. Will the main site ever come back online, or has it been written off permanently? Also, as I remember, there was a note somewhere on the site that the owner(s) of the BAMA site were no longer accepting manuals for test equipment... only real "boat anchors" such as tube type radios, ham gear, etc. Am I remembering correctly, or was there a different restriction or has the restriction been removed? I know that I tried to upload a couple Tektronix manuals that I had scanned, but they never showed up on the site.

David
dgminala at mediacombb dot net




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