Maintenance manuals put out by the Brother corp must be seen to be believed
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Date: March 21st, 2021 10:45 AM Author: rebellious claret prole step-uncle's house
The drawings in Brother service manuals are incredibly helpful and easy to understand. Their artists pay close attention to detail and their lines are crisp and clean. This screenshot, taken from the service manual for the MFC-L5800DW, is a good example.
https://ibb.co/ZHmy0rm
This screenshot, taken from that same manual, is also typical. The supporting text is well written and concise. With other devices, you often have to figure out on the fly what tools to use when performing maintenance or repair, but Brother gives you detailed information about every screw and fastener so that you can prepare for any obstacle:
https://ibb.co/HBt9V3x
It's not apparent from these samples, but the images in their PDFs are very high resolution, so you can zoom in on their drawings if you need to see tiny details on something. The footnote at the bottom of the first image is amusing as well. Brother helpfully informs you that harness colors are subject to change but confesses that it does not know why. No other peripheral manufacturer would be so candid. This is most likely an artifact of Japan's apology culture, but due to homogenization in the technical writing industry over the last 50 years you're unlikely to find such idiosyncrasies in work product put out by Canon or even Epson.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4792260&forum_id=2#42140368) |
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