I printed around 250 pages of manuals for my cb550 and I was trying to figure out how to bind them together. I hate three ring binders I always seem to break the rings and hole punching 4 pages at a time so they'll all line up with the rings is a PITA. A folder doesn't work...the pages just end up a mess and flipping back and forth is hard. Stapling is simply out of the question, and I can't do the fancy fall apart glue job that most store bought manuals get, SO I thought about it a bit and came up with this.
A BIT DANGEROUS> take the extra length of 2X12 you have left over from making your truck ramp and lay it on the ground. Set the entire stack of paper on the board and line up all the edges. Now drive nails in around the pages (not through) to hold them in place. Next pull out a nice big drill bit along with your favorite drill. Take a straight edge and draw a line around 1/4-1/2" from the edge of the paper. Now drill 5 holes down that line. Spacing doesn't have to be precise your gonna get oil all over this thing not to mention blood, sweat, and a few tears, so it doesn't need to look great. Now pull out your trusty zip ties (police riot cuffs kinda things) and run one through each hole. (you may want to divide your book into 50 page sections, that's what I did...I haven't tested anything more than that) You now have a usefull manual.
I haven't tried any of these things but a few ideas I've thought of that might make it work better are:
1 clear packaging tape on the first and last page to add durability (atleast put it along the edge your drilling)
2 A clear plastic folder same reason(just drill right through it and proceed as normal)
3 A 6th hole in a corner...this is incase you take my advice on the 50 page maximum. Use a clip of some sort to attach the manual together to prevent part of it being lost.
4 When drilling the holes I advise you NOT to hold the paper down with your hand...this is the easiest way to do it but I've seen a drill bit break and a broken bit go through a finger like it was nothing...I DID use my fingers but I do NOT recommend it. You have to hold it down with something though...probably a (can't think of the word so here's a description) piece of wood with holes predrilled at the correct locations and distance from the edge of the paper. Set that on the paper and line it up along the edge of the paper. Put some weight on the board and go at it.
TIPS
1 use both sides of the page. Most printer software has a "reverse each page" as well as a "print only even and only odd pages" setting. USE THESE TO YOUR ADVANTAGE. They reduce the size of the manual by half greatly increasing it's usability.
Anyone else have any neat binding methods.