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2 answers

--This isn't directed at you grady, this is for everyone that reads this.
--Anyone attempting to work on their own vehicle should own a shop manual.
--Run into a problem? Got a question? Not sure about something? Need tune-up specs? Just open the manual and look!
--$30 is a small price to pay and will give you piece of mind, knowing the correct answer to you question.
--Plus you won't have to run all over town, surff the web until your fingers bleed, or ask questions on message boards hoping you'll get accurate answers.
--When bikes get over 10 years old, the manuals go out of print and get scarcer by the year.
--If you can afford to buy a bike/quad, you can afford $30 to buy a manual.
http://www.motocom.com/motorcycles/

2007-03-24 08:35:34 · answer #1 · answered by guardrailjim 7 · 0 1

Your local dealership should do the trick if you can't find anything on the internet. When I worked in a motorcycle dealership we had all that stuff in the shop. I'm sure someone would be willing to show you it and make a copy or print out.

2007-03-24 05:34:48 · answer #2 · answered by John D 1 · 0 0

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