Does anyone have a set of drawings for the Breisch Olds 1/2 scale engine?
The question is who holds the copyright? As far as I know the plans are not available from any current owners.The plans are not in the public domain so copyright still exists and they can't be legally shared. CAD drawings made from the copyrighted plans are fine for personal use (very likely anyway) but also cannot be shared legally with anyone else.
The question is who holds the copyright? As far as I know the plans are not available from any current owners.
As far as CAD drawings for personal use I certainly hope that is legal since I frequently make CAD drawings of engines I am working on. It gives me a better understanding of the engine and gives me a means of checking things like fit and what happens if I make a modification. Changing a drawing is easy and cheap compared to making wrong parts which do not fit.
To be clear, I have purchased a casting set for the olds 1/2 scale engine. Drawings were not included. I only want to be able to finish the castings. So I am seeking any resolution to that end.
I have a set of these drawings that I acquired some years ago and no longer need. There is no copyright information anywhere on them. They were redrawn by Paul P. Breisch on 5-24-76. If interested PM me.To be clear, I have purchased a casting set for the olds 1/2 scale engine. Drawings were not included. I only want to be able to finish the castings. So I am seeking any resolution to that end.
OK So how do we know if something is copyrighted? I doubt whether many of the hobbyist, particularly years ago, actually bothered with a copyright. Also when does a modification become my design? Change 1" bore to 1 1/16? Mirror image? Built from bar stock as opposed to castings? After all, all hit and miss engines are pretty much the same design. Actually I thought that there was a time limit on copyrights but I do not know how long that would be. 10 years or 100 years. Does the death of the original designer and the dissolving of the original manufacturer make a difference? Does an original design imply a copyright? If so I have hundreds of original designs out there. I spent 30 years designing and building industrial machines but almost all designs are just a variation on a basic concept.Unfortunately they are copyright, they belonged to Paul Breish and now whoever has the castings that go with them. There does not need to be an explicit copyright indicator. Those were, as far as I know his last revisions, ie re-drawn. All of us would like to accommodate, I too have drawings that I have no need of, but I still feel the best way to go is find the owner and the response by littlelocos is an excellent source of information.
I respect “copyrighted “ material law.How about we just leave it it to board policy:
https://www.homemodelenginemachinist.com/threads/copyright-notice.3856/
OK So how do we know if something is copyrighted? I doubt whether many of the hobbyist, particularly years ago, actually bothered with a copyright.
Also when does a modification become my design? Change 1" bore to 1 1/16? Mirror image? Built from bar stock as opposed to castings? After all, all hit and miss engines are pretty much the same design.
Actually I thought that there was a time limit on copyrights but I do not know how long that would be. 10 years or 100 years. Does the death of the original designer and the dissolving of the original manufacturer make a difference? Does an original design imply a copyright? If so I have hundreds of original designs out there. I spent 30 years designing and building industrial machines but almost all designs are just a variation on a basic concept.
I respect “copyrighted “ material law.
But in this case with Mr.Breish having passed away over twenty years ago ,is there truly any harm
In sharing a set of needed plans to a fellow model engineer?
Copyright doesn't need to be applied for, it's automatically applied to the publication, so it's safe to assume almost everything is subject to copyright.
The exact point where a derivative work becomes your own would be a question for a lawyer or a judge, but common sense tells us that if your design is only a modification of another design then it's not your design. Think about the problems musicians run into when then use similar riffs or melodies, even when they change the key and timing. Basically, if your design is based on someone else's then they hold the copyright.
Time limits vary by country of publication, type of publication and year of publication/generation. In many cases, for USA produced stuff in our hobby domain, copyright extends 95 years after magazine publication or 70 years after the death of the author for other works.
Yes, there would be copyrights applicable to your original designs but depending how you distributed the material (or who was paying you to produce them) the copyrights may have been voided or passed along to your employer or customer. More questions for a lawyer.
Yes there is potential harm in this. Someone holds the copyright to these plans and they have commercial value. It is entirely possible that this person may seek to sell these plans in the future and having the plans shared despite copyright would devalue them. Just recently some long out-of-print plans were re-released electronically and many sets were sold to interested modellers. Had they been shared illegally the copyright owner would not have sold many, if any, sets. Now the modellers who received the illegal plans may have saved a few dollars, but the copyright holder and designer, plus many other designers, may have then decided that it simply wasn't worth the effort to produce new plan sets for other engines as copyright wasn't being respected, which hurts our entire hobby. We don't have enough plan producers to risk turning them away from the hobby by sharing copyrighted plans for our own convenience.
I know it's painful but if the plans are available for the 1/4 scale, then maybe a purchase of them and scale to suit the castings might work?
Copyright doesn't need to be applied for, it's automatically applied to the publication, so it's safe to assume almost everything is subject to copyright.
Yes there is potential harm in this. Someone holds the copyright to these plans and they have commercial value. It is entirely possible that this person may seek to sell these plans in the future and having the plans shared despite copyright would devalue them. Just recently some long out-of-print plans were re-released electronically and many sets were sold to interested modelers. Had they been shared illegally the copyright owner would not have sold many, if any, sets. Now the modelers who received the illegal plans may have saved a few dollars, but the copyright holder and designer, plus many other designers, may have then decided that it simply wasn't worth the effort to produce new plan sets for other engines as copyright wasn't being respected, which hurts our entire hobby. We don't have enough plan producers to risk turning them away from the hobby by sharing copyrighted plans for our own convenience.
I know it's painful but if the plans are available for the 1/4 scale, then maybe a purchase of them and scale to suit the castings might work?
As a retired bookseller, I tend to think of these used plans in the same context as used books and other publications. It is not illegal to sell used books or ephemera, but it may be illegal to sell reproductions without authorization of the copyright holder. The recourse for the copyright holder is civil action.
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