That's why it's called a standard, and nothing less.
Otherwise it's always not quite ready for adoption.
The purpose of the data has evolved over years as a response to and a source for various investigations and campaigns that feed into the European Right To Repair campaign. It is also used by individual repair groups and networks to demonstrate their work and achievements - both environmental and social - in order to garner support and funding. The main use of the dataset is as an overview of a glimpse of community repair activity worldwide.
https://metabase.openrepair.org/dashboard/97-ora-data-overvi...
Removal of model field due to problems with data collection and qualityThe things everyone wants:
1. A service manual or other doc showing all the parts and their specs.
2. The full repair process, including how to do teardown and reassembly.
3. All the tools required to do the job correctly.
The data seems quite useless to both owner and repairman. You would have much better data by mining it from comments in YouTube repair videos.