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In my experience, the holders of valid copyrights on outdated material tend
to go easy on casual swaps of copies among hobbyists. However, if it looks like someone intends to make a living selling copies of their stuff, AND the owner still stands to make significant income from said stuff, then they might get lawyers involved, probably starting with a "cease and desist" letter. A couple of years ago, I got an email from someone at SAMS (the Photofact people) noting that I had posted a portion of a 1950s SAMS TV schematic on my website. This was a restoration article and the schematic snip illustrated a specific problem that I had solved. The SAMS guy was very nice, and only asked that I give them credit for having supplied the schematic. This, despite the fact that SAMS is alive and well, and it typically sells that sort of schematic for around $25 a pop. They probably figured that the miniscule amount of free advertising for long-obsolete schematics outweighed the hassle/expense of having some higher-paid employee call me long distance to make the same request :-) The schematic snippet wasn't that important to the article anyhow, so I simply deleted it from the web article. It's harder than you might imagine to find out who -- if anyone -- still holds a valid copyright to old material. I have tried looking a couple of times, and ran out of patience long before I found an answer. It never occurred to me to look on Ebay for a schematic or manual. I have had good luck with suppliers such as http://www.w7fg.com/ and http://agtannenbaum.com/ and http://www.tubesandmore.com/ . Phil Nelson Phil's Old Radios http://antiqueradio.org/index.html |
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