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1980GS1000 Full Factory Shop Manual.....
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Anonymous
1980GS1000 Full Factory Shop Manual.....
.....is a great compliment to your Clymer and Hayes manuals. I recommend it to everybody. [-XTags: None
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Anonymous
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SqDancerLynn1
8O 8O 8 minutes even with DSL 8) 8) 8) Just remember the service procedures are simillar on all of the GS bikes so even if you don't have a GS1000 there will be a lot if info that you can use and relate to your bike if you don't have your own maunal Print IT?????? it's 477 pages
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Mastiff
I got it in 6 min 39 seconds. Yes, I love DSL.
Thanks, Steve
If someone with a slow connection needs a copy, I'll try to put this on a disk for you. It might take me a bit, I am using Linux, and I would have to figure out how to get it to produce a pdf file that windows can read. If this violates a copyright law, someone would have to let me know.
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Anonymous
It is against the law. You can't copy more than a few paragraphs of a book or magazine without permission.
Steve
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deano
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Anonymous
Originally posted by srivettIt is against the law. You can't copy more than a few paragraphs of a book or magazine without permission.
Steve:-({|=
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THANKS!!!!
I found a Clymer manual years ago at a bike show in the "book section"
10$ and I use it constantly.
This adds to the collection.
With broadband it took a couple of minutes.
Don't tell Steve I "broke the law"Keith
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1980 GS1000S, blue and white
2015Triumph Trophy SE
Ever notice you never see a motorcycle parked in front of a psychiatrist office?
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Forum GuruCharter Member
GSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter- Oct 2002
- 8859
- Angeles Forest, So.Calif./Red rocks of Southern Utah.
I clicked the link, just to see and it shut my computer down.And on the seventh day,after resting from all that he had done,God went for a ride on his GS!
Upon seeing that it was good, he went out again on his ZX14! But just a little bit faster!
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Anonymous
Keith: I don't care at all, I just wanted the person who asked to be aware. At Carleton University everybody goes directly from the book store to the photocopy shop. Then they return the books the next day. There is even a place in town that sells photocopied textbooks (some of our texts cost 150$+).
Steve
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blo
Ok, this got my competitive gene going. The file took 5.5 min to dowload at approx. 79kB/s. I'v added a copy to my own domain, situated at the fastes server on earth (over 2GB/s optic line). You should, if possible, be able to dowload it at approx 100Mbit/sec. Try if you like, the address is http://www.stud.ntnu.no/~blo
I'll keep the file for 7 days.
If anyone has strong reservation about this, let me know an I'll take it down earlier.
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lhanscom
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lhanscom
Ok did it again, from the new server 1min 28sec at 330kb/sec.
Ok enough geeking for me, back to work.
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QuaiChangKane
Thanks for the download!
Keith - that file's huge (28 megs?). If you just click on the link, your computer will try to open Acrobat Reader to view the file from it's remote location - it would definitely lock your machine up.
You should right click on it, and select "save target as" (if you're on a Windows machine)...
(Edit: How'd you rip that - autofeed scanner? Big chip, and a gang of memory? I've had to scan engineering documents (B&W) at 300DPI on a P4 2G with 256 megs of PC2100 DDR, to a UDMA 133 disk, and it would take 12 minutes to scan 37 auto-fed pages. Just curious - high-dollar scanner, maybe?)
-Q!
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satchmo
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