This category is useful when you are looking for manuals built around gasoline engine families rather than one single vehicle brand. The visible listings include small industrial and utility engines such as Honda G65/G80, Honda GXV270/GXV340/GXV390, Honda GX240K1/GX270/GX340K1/GX390K1, Kawasaki KF82/KF100/KF150, Kohler Command and Magnum series engines, and Yanmar 3TG66/3TG72. At the same time, the page also pulls in engine-focused manuals from wider machine contexts, including Toyota F-engine and 22R-E coverage, KTM engine manuals, Yamaha EF-series engine service material, Rotax, Suzuki GT750, and other gasoline-engine listings.
That matters because this is not a narrow small-engine page and not a clean automotive-only page either. It is best used as an engine-match page. The strongest buying clue is usually the exact engine family or engine code in the title, not the broad category name.
The fastest way to use this page correctly is to ignore the category wording for a moment and look for the exact engine family first. On this page, the right match often depends on codes such as GXV390, GX270, KF150, CV460, MV18, 22R-E, 3TG72, or 6VE1. Those codes are far more reliable than a broad label like gasoline engine, generator engine, utility engine, motorcycle engine, or truck engine.
This is where buyers often make the first mistake. They search by brand, notice a familiar displacement or product line, and stop too early. On this page, that can lead to a near match instead of the correct one. A Honda GXV manual is not the same buying target as a Honda G-series file, and a Kohler Command listing should not be treated as the same thing as an MV-series manual just because both belong to Kohler.
Honda is a good example of why exact family names matter here. The visible inventory includes Honda G65/G80, Honda GXV270/GXV340/GXV390, and Honda GX240K1/GX270/GX340K1/GX390K1. Those are close enough to tempt a buyer into picking by rough engine size, but the family naming is doing real selection work. GX, GXV, and G-series titles should not be blended together.
Kohler works the same way. The visible page includes Command-family coverage such as CV11-16, CV460-465, and CV490-495, but also MV16, MV18, and MV20 twin-cylinder engines. If you are shopping Kohler manuals here, match the exact series letters before you trust the engine number. That one habit prevents a lot of wrong purchases on mixed engine pages like this.
Some of the most useful listings on the page are also the ones where a buyer can go wrong fastest by reading too loosely. Kawasaki KF82, KF100, and KF150 are grouped together in one workshop manual. Yanmar 3TG66 and 3TG72 appear together in a component manual. Yamaha EF4000, EF4600, EF5500, and EF6600 variants are also grouped in one long service-manual title.
Grouped titles can be helpful because one manual may legitimately cover several close engines. But they also require discipline from the buyer. If your engine code is not actually one of the listed variants, the fact that the brand looks right is not enough. The safer rule is simple: if the title groups several engines, check whether your exact designation is included before you go any further.
This page also includes engine manuals that come from vehicle platforms, such as Toyota F-engine and 22R-E manuals, KTM engine repair titles, Suzuki GT750 engine service material, and other gasoline-engine references tied to a wider machine family. These should still be matched by engine designation first, not just by the vehicle name.
That is especially important when one engine appears across multiple machines or year spans. A buyer looking for Toyota 22R-E material should match 22R-E first and then confirm the year range. A KTM buyer should not stop at engine size alone if the title also names SX-F, EXC-F, XC-F, XCF-W, or SXS-F variants. A page like this becomes helpful when you use the engine code and variant wording as the primary filter.
Once the family or code looks right, the next decision signals are the year span and the document type. The visible inventory includes service manuals, workshop manuals, repair manuals, component manuals, and even an owner's manual. That distinction matters because the right engine family with the wrong document type can still be the wrong purchase for what the buyer expects to receive.
A practical way to avoid mistakes on this page is to treat each title like a short checklist. First match the exact engine family or code. Then confirm any variant suffixes or grouped designations. After that, check the year span. Finally, read whether the listing is a service, workshop, repair, or component manual. This category is good for buyers who already have one reliable engine identifier and want to compare visible titles carefully instead of buying from brand recognition alone.