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Well, I used to read the manuals religiously, then try out the equipment. But, manuals ain't what they used to be! Model trains aren't so bad (except for the useless California materials warnings), but the manuals for tools have become jokes. They are mostly lawyered to the point of uselessness. I have to read through actual pages of generalize warnings that sound like the kindergarten teacher saying "Don't run with scissors!" just to find a bit of information about how to run the gizmo. And, everything must be written in multiple languages, the number of which seems to increase annually. Now, it is not just English, Spanish, French and German, but also several Asian languages that I can't even tell apart. With all that legal verbage in all those languages, there is precious little space left for actual gizmo-specific instructions. Apparently, that is left to the YouTubers to provide. The actual manuals seem to have been written by somebody who has neither created nor used the gizmo, and then translated into English by somebody else who not only doesn't understand the gizmo, but doesn't really understand English very well, either. Model train instructions might not be great for the really complicated locos with decoders, these days, but they are still far better than what I see for other consumer goods.
But, if they really need to put that lawyer language in everything, ...
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