Honda CBR1000RR Fireblade 2004-2007 Grab Rail
Motorcycle grab rails from Renntec... More Info
Motorcycle grab rails from Renntec... More Info
Winter Motorcycle Gloves With Knuckle Protectors... More Info
Kawasaki Fork Seals... More Info
Kawasaki Titax Levers... More Info
HONDA BRAKE PADS... More Info
Custom Exhaust pipes from Highway Hawk... More Info
Front paddock stand... More Info
Custom exhausts from Highway Hawk... More Info
Heated Grips from Motorbike Parts direct... More Info
CAGIVA BRAKE PADS... More Info
Ducati Motorcycle Manuals... More Info
Kawasaki Motorcycle Manuals... More Info
Honda Motorcycle Manuals... More Info
Suzuki Motorcycle Manuals... More Info
Harley Motorcycle Manuals... More Info
Multi Purpose Wire Free Motorcycle Alarm... More Info
YAMAHA OIL FILTERS... More Info
A complete range of Motorcycle workshop manuals from Haynes
John Haynes OBE wrote and published his first book, on building an Austin 7 Special, whilst he was still at school in 1956. He wrote two more 'Special' builders' manuals while doing his National Service in the RAF. The first 'proper' Haynes Owners Workshop Manual, for the Austin Healey ‘Frogeye’ Sprite, was published in 1965. Based on the stripdown and rebuild of the project vehicle and with extensive use of step-by-step photographs – a process that has not changed to this day – this manual set the standard for many generations of manuals to follow.
Since Haynes Publishing was founded in 1960, approximately 150 million Haynes Manuals have sold throughout the world, over 1 million in the UK last year alone. There are around 300 UK car manuals in print at present with 130 plus UK motorcycle manual titles - not to mention equivalent ranges in the USA, France and Sweden. Actually writing a car manual takes 20 to 30 man-weeks. Authors work in pairs, which shortens the origination time and avoids them going crazy in the middle of long projects. We buy a car at the beginning of the project and sell it at the end - either to staff or on the open market. The workshop phase lasts approximately 4 weeks, although we usually keep the car until the manual is about to print in case of last-minute queries. From the start of a project to the publication of the manual usually takes between three and six months. Motorcycle manuals take about two-thirds as long.