Does anyone who writes the manuals actually read the things?

Andrew Everard Thursday, August 30, 2007 16:39

As the more eagle-eyed website visitor may have spotted, I have been know to answer the odd question over on the WHFSV Forums, writes Andrew Everard. It’s amazing how many times the same questions turn up, about selecting equipment – 32in LCD TVs seem to be the objects of desire at the moment – or making particular pieces of equipment work together.

For the latter kind of query, I now seem to spend half of my life with two instruction manuals side by side on my computer screen, trying to work out how to make a particular output on Item A talk a language Item B will understand, or configuring Item B to even acknowledge that Item A is connected to it.

It might seem tempting to respond with the old advice to RTFM – that’s “Read the Flamin’ Manual” for the family audience – but the more I pore over the thick tomes that come with so much equipment these days, the more I share users’ pain. I’ve installed hundreds of amplifiers, receivers, CD and DVD players and TVs, but still I struggle at times to find my way around the manual, let alone the product.

Avc-A1Xva-Rear
Products have become more complicated, but have the manuals improved?

While products have got more complicated, the technology to explain them hasn’t developed much beyond the ‘glue crossmember B to flange K3’ sheets we used to get with plastic model kits. The only difference is, today’s ‘instruction sheets’ often run to over 100 pages!

Automatic set-up is now common on AV receivers, but most of the problems concern connections or configurations deep in sub-menus, for which the manual is the only answer.

Maybe it’s time to supplement downloadable instruction manuals with online interactive set-up guides for this kind of product. These could lead us through those fiendishly complex set-up routines – and think how many trees we’d save into the bargain.

Or maybe, as a Forum member was asking the other day, it explains at least some of the success enjoyed by companies like Bose. Last time I set up one of that company's upmarket Lifestyle systems I opened the box to find a big A3 sheet showing me just what connected to what and went where.

And when that was done, I was asked to load a disc designed to walk me through the entire set-up procedure, including simple but logical stuff like "this sound should now be coming from the left rear speaker". It really makes a lot of sense...

Bose L48
Bose systems come complete with simple set-up discs

Comments

Damien Buckley August 31, 2007 00:26

Great article and spot on. The manual for my Denon AVR-4306, apart from including all languages which is a) a pain in the backside because it is almost two inches thick and b) extremely environmentally unfriendly, is not badly written but its organisation assumes some electronics knowledge and is not exactly well organised.  What about one language per manual with other languages available for download for those in the UK who want Cantonese and lets keep the 'Advanced' part seperate also.

<p>I've been into HiFi for a long time and this being my second Denon AV amp, a dedicated reader of What Hifi, and regular forum visitor, I'm pretty good with it but I seriously pity anyone who bought one of these who doesnt know about HiFi etc.

<p>I love Apple, you open the box, everything comes out of the box in order and beautifully presented with the 'quick-start' instructions which are usually plug this in here and turn on, much it sounds like your Bose manual.

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About Andrew Everard

Andrew Everard, Audio Editor of Gramophone since November 1999 and What Hi-Fi? Sound and Vision's Consulting Editor, read English at Queens' College, Cambridge a very long time ago! He started his journalistic career in 1982 on Haymarket's photographic magazines, and subsequently worked on What Hi-Fi?, High Fidelity, Audiophile and Home Cinema magazines, as well as contributing a monthly column to Japanese title HiVi.