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#1
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Howdy,
How does FAA type certification relate to intellectual property rights? For example: everything in an O-235 has been out of patent for years now. Same with old aircraft designs. Is there any reason why somebody couldn't tool up and start ripping out O-235s, and selling them new? I ask because it seems weird that a dozen or so companies are designing new engines from scratch that are only marginal improvements over the old ones. Yet nobody reverse engineers and manufactures out-of-patent engines to fill demand instead. Does the FAA type certification trump the USPTO when it comes to patent law? I can't emagine that such an arrangement would ever hold up in a high court. The FAA can't just spontaneously dictate that it owns every peice technology ever used in aviation, and that you can only profit from public domain technology if it says so. Or do they? I'm not knocking the FAA's safety interests. But public domain is public domain. If I can make a 1948 mousetrap and sell it, why not a Continental Engine? If anybody can refer me to documentation on this or the section of law or regulation that pertains to it, I'd be quite appreciative. I can't emagine such a law exists. But I also can't understand why there is so much reinvention of the wheel. -Thanks in advance ! -Matt |
#2
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psyshrike wrote:
How does FAA type certification relate to intellectual property rights? For example: everything in an O-235 has been out of patent for years now. Same with old aircraft designs. Is there any reason why somebody couldn't tool up and start ripping out O-235s, and selling them new? It doesn't relate to the intellectual property rights, really. There's nothing that keeps you from type certiciating a device you don't own the rights to. What the certification does is show that you have demonstrated via tests and a preponderance of paperwork that your engine meets the FAA requirements and your ancillary stuff: manufacturing, service tracking, etc... is up to snuff. Someone could start making 235 clones, but they couldn't use Lycoming's certification to do it. The "proof" of the design is only one part of the manufacturer's certification, they need to continually meet the other regulatory standards as well. Does the FAA type certification trump the USPTO when it comes to patent law? It doesn't have any affect on patent law, nor does patent law affect the FAA type certification. Both patent law and certification are in force independently and simoultaneously. You must have complied with any patent requirements for the invention as WELL as gaining FAA certs and approval for selling aircraft parts. I'm not knocking the FAA's safety interests. But public domain is public domain. If I can make a 1948 mousetrap and sell it, why not a Continental Engine? You are free to get your clone engine certificated. However, you can't just go out and manufacture airplane parts because they are clones of some approved part. As I said, there is more to the certification and manufacturing authority than just "proof" of the design. If anybody can refer me to documentation on this or the section of law or regulation that pertains to it, I'd be quite appreciative. I can't emagine such a law exists. But I also can't understand why there is so much reinvention of the wheel. Start by reading Part 21. |
#3
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How does FAA type certification relate to intellectual property
rights? Simple answer is that it doesn't .... not one little bit. For example: everything in an O-235 has been out of patent for years now. Same with old aircraft designs. Is there any reason why somebody couldn't tool up and start ripping out O-235s, and selling them new? No not really ... HOWEVER you would have to prove to the FAA that you have all the drawings and all the engineering data to support such an activity. There may also be tooling involved. Possession of this data is really the critical issue. There are examples, one fairly well known involving a current production airplane, which I won't name specifically here, in which such data was obtained by the backdoor and the airplane put into production be persons who apparently have little right to do so. It is for this reason that OEM's so closely guard their data. If you chose to do this you would also have to jump through the hoops to get a production certificate. There are other options though to produce parts covered by existing TC's without such data or 'ownership' of the type certificate such as a PMA. See FAR Part 21 for the details of this. There is also an FAA Order 8130-2C which will answer most of your questions. Get these documents from the FAA web site. If you have anymore specific questions let me know. |
#4
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#5
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Ron Natalie wrote in message om...
psyshrike wrote: How does FAA type certification relate to intellectual property rights? SNIP It doesn't relate to the intellectual property rights, really. There's nothing that keeps you from type certiciating a device you don't own the rights to. What the certification does is show that you have demonstrated via tests and a preponderance of paperwork that your engine meets the FAA requirements and your ancillary stuff: manufacturing, service tracking, etc... is up to snuff. Someone could start making 235 clones, but they couldn't use Lycoming's certification to do it. The "proof" of the design is only one part of the manufacturer's certification, they need to continually meet the other regulatory standards as well. From the FAA's standpoint is a type certificate issued per application, or per device? Does a type certificate care who filed it from a regulatory standpoint? (Not being flip, just trying to understand how this works) By the sounds of it their are quality control requirements that are also part of the TC. Obviously those would have to be met independently. To go back to the engine hypothetical, say I reverse engineered the 235. As a result my engineers have generated a lot of drafting data, I also have fits and tolerances information (published by the OEM) and a material analysis that gives us an alloy specification. I then write a shop practice SOP for manufacture. I _reference_ the OEM's TC for the flight testing portion of my TC, plus maybe a short suppliment to impirically confirm identicle performance characteristics. If a field mechanic and an FAA expert couldn't tell the difference between engine A and engine B, is there any regulatory reason this wouldn't work? Start by reading Part 21. I read portions of it a while ago. My copy of the FAR is packed away right now. Is this on the net somewhere? -Thanks -Matt |
#6
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psyshrike wrote:
From the FAA's standpoint is a type certificate issued per application, or per device? Both...although you can put multiple aircraft/engines on a single type certificat. Does a type certificate care who filed it from a regulatory standpoint? Certainly.. To go back to the engine hypothetical, say I reverse engineered the 235. As a result my engineers have generated a lot of drafting data, I also have fits and tolerances information (published by the OEM) and a material analysis that gives us an alloy specification. I then write a shop practice SOP for manufacture. I _reference_ the OEM's TC for the flight testing portion of my TC, plus maybe a short suppliment to impirically confirm identicle performance characteristics. You can't reference the OEM's type certificate. They're not the same part as far as the FAA's concerned and there the certificate only references the "grant" of the authority, not the underlying data. If a field mechanic and an FAA expert couldn't tell the difference between engine A and engine B, is there any regulatory reason this wouldn't work? The FAA will never issue such a certfiicate. If you're asking if you can't tell a cloned part from a legitimate "type certificated paart" whether that would be proper. Start by reading Part 21. I read portions of it a while ago. My copy of the FAR is packed away right now. Is this on the net somewhere? Yes, you know you could find out a lot of this, by poking around the FAA website. It even has a search engine and if you dig down in the "FAA Organizational tree" they have you'll find the certification office's page which has a lot of other orders and documentation. |
#7
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You don't have PMA.
I cannot buy a Gates belt and put it on my Piper, but I can but a belt from Piper that they bought from Gates, and put it on my plane. Nobody could tell the difference, because there is none. That doesn't make it legal. Same holds true for the u-joint holding my yoke together. It's not legal to put it in the plane unless Piper has blessed it first (with their invoice). "psyshrike" wrote in message om... If a field mechanic and an FAA expert couldn't tell the difference between engine A and engine B, is there any regulatory reason this wouldn't work? |
#8
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![]() psyshrike wrote: I read portions of it a while ago. My copy of the FAR is packed away right now. Is this on the net somewhere? If you're an AOPA member, try http://www.aopa.org/members/files/fars George Patterson If a man gets into a fight 3,000 miles away from home, he *had* to have been looking for it. |
#9
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![]() "Steve Foley" wrote in message ... You don't have PMA. I cannot buy a Gates belt and put it on my Piper, but I can but a belt from Piper that they bought from Gates, and put it on my plane. Nobody could tell the difference, because there is none. That doesn't make it legal. Same holds true for the u-joint holding my yoke together. It's not legal to put it in the plane unless Piper has blessed it first (with their invoice). "psyshrike" wrote in message om... If a field mechanic and an FAA expert couldn't tell the difference between engine A and engine B, is there any regulatory reason this wouldn't work? Anyone can reverse engineer the 'part' and apply for PMA for it. The feds will accept it if the process is good... |
#10
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![]() "psyshrike" wrote in message om... Start by reading Part 21. I read portions of it a while ago. My copy of the FAR is packed away right now. Is this on the net somewhere? -Thanks -Matt fars he http://ecfr.gpoaccess.gov/cgi/t/text...4/14tab_02.tpl |
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