To the best of my knowledge, there are 58 volumes from 1958 through 1988, including multi-volume years and supplements. It doesn't count the supplements to MR851 (Eagle Mechanical) and MR852 (Eagle Body) because I can't find the file that I copied from an old Dyment order form that includes the supplements at the moment. I am currently about 60% of my way toward having a complete set. I don't include the pocket service spec guides or the new car service information volumes in this list, though I have some of both these series. Nor does this cover Jeep from 1970 on. --Glen At 02:24 PM 12/30/2007, you wrote: >Oh man you gotta have a factory technical service manual!!! I don't know >how anyone wrenches ramblers without one!! There's just so much >information, they reveal so much, it's be like working in the dark without >one. > >In fact it pays to have many of them, for each of the sort-of chassis >classes, as a lot of things are better in one vs. another, and you get to >compare years for parts, specs and techniques. > >I'm about 70% of the way to a full set (58 - 88), and while I paid $50 each >for my 63 Classic and 70 hornet (pre internet) most I paid under $20 for -- >eBay! > >Anything around the performance cars (AMX, Jav, etc) 68 - 69 cost the most! > >A decent reference set of TSMs is, if you want full-product line info, > >62 American (lots of these available) >63 or 64 Classic/Ambo >67 >70 >74 >79 >82 or so > >That covers most motors at least partly and those TSMs seem to be more >common. Before 67 somewhere the american books were separate from >classic/ambo. _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list