Give Us One Manual For Normies, Another For Hackers

Weβve all been there. Youβve found a beautiful piece of older hardware at the thrift store, and bought it for a song. You rush it home, eager to tinker, but you soon find itβs just not working. You open it up to attempt a repair, but you could really use some information on what youβre looking at and how to enter service mode. Onlyβ¦ a Google search turns up nothing but dodgy websites offering blurry PDFs for entirely the wrong model, and youβre out of luck.
These days, when you buy an appliance, the best documentation you can expect is a Quick Start guide and a warranty card youβll never use. Manufacturers simply donβt want to give you real information, because they think the average consumer will get scared and confused. I think they can do better. Iβm demanding a new two-tier documentation systemβthe basics for the normies, and real manuals for the tech heads out there.
Give Us The Goods
Once upon a time, appliances came withΒ real manuals andΒ real documentation. You could buy a radio that came with a full list of valves that were used inside, while telephones used to come with printed circuit diagrams right inside the case. But then the world changed, and a new phrase became a common sight on consumer goodsββNO USER SERVICABLE PARTS INSIDE.β No more was the end user considered qualified or able to peek within the case of the hardware theyβd bought. They were fools who could barely be trusted to turn the thing on and work it properly, let alone intervene in the event something needed attention.
This attitude has only grown over the years. As our devices have become ever more complex, the documentation delivered with them has shrunk to almost non-existent proportions. Where a Sony television manual from the 1980s contained a complete schematic of the whole set, a modern smartphone might only include a QR code linking to basic setup instructions on a website online. Itβs all part of an effort by companies to protect the consumer from themselves, because they surely canβt be trusted with the arcane knowledge of what goes on inside a modern device.
This Sony tv manual from 1985 contained the complete electrical schematics for the set.
byu/a_seventh_knot inmildlyinteresting
This sort of intensely technical documentation was the norm just a few decades ago.

Itβs understandable, to a degree. When a non-technical person buys a television, they really just need to know how to plug it in and hook it up to an aerial. With the ongoing decline in literacy rates, itβs perhaps a smart move by companies to not include any further information than that. Long words and technical information would just make it harder for these customers to figure out how to use the TV in the first place, and they might instead choose a brand that offers simpler documentation.
This doesnβt feel fair for the power user set. There are many of us who want to know how to change our televisionβs color mode, how to tinker with the motion smoothing settings, and how to enter deeper service modes when something seems awry. And yet, that information is kept from us quite intentionally. Often, itβs only accessible in service manuals that are only made available through obscure channels to selected people authorised by OEMs.
Two Tiers, Please

I donβt think it has to be this way. I think itβs perfectly fine for manufacturers to include simple, easy-to-follow instructions with consumer goods. However, I donβt think that should preclude them from also offering detailed technical manuals for those users that want and need them. I think, in fact, that these should be readily available as a matter of course.
Call it a βsuperuser manual,β and have it only available via a QR code in the back of the basic, regular documentation. Call it an βAdvanced Technical Supplementβ or a βCalibration And Maintenance Appendix.β Whatever jargon scares off the normies so they donβt accidentally come across it and then complain to tech support that they donβt know why their user interface is now only displaying garbled arcane runes. It can be a little hard to find, but at the end of the day, it should be a simple PDF that can be downloaded without a lot of hurdles or paywalls.
Iβm not expecting manufacturers to go back to giving us full schematics for everything. It would be nice, but realistically itβs probably overkill. You can just imagine what that would like for a modern smartphone or even just a garden variety automobile in 2025. However, I think itβs pretty reasonable to expect something better than the bare basics of how to interact with the software and such. The techier manuals should, at a minimum, indicate how to do things like execute a full reset, enter any service modes, and indicate how the device isΒ to be safely assembled and disassembled should one wish to execute repairs.
Of course, this wonβt help those of us repairing older gear from the 90s and beyond. If you want to fix that old S-VHS camcorder from 1995, youβre still going to have to go to some weird website and risk your credit card details over a $30 charge for a service manual that might cover your problem. But it would be a great help for any new gear moving forward. Forums died years ago, so we can no longer Google for a post from some old retired tech who remembers the secret key combination to enter the service menu. We need that stuff hosted on manufacturer websites so we can get it in five minutes instead of five hours of strenuous research.
Will any manufacturers actually listen to this demand? Probably, no. This sort of change needs to happen at a higher level. Perhaps the right to repair movement and some boisterous EU legislation could make it happen. After all, there is an increasing clamour for users to have more rights over the hardware and appliances they pay for. If and when it happens, I will be cheering when the first manuals for techies become available. Heaven knows we deserve them!