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Are you saying that boeing realise the P51 was rubbish?
Your proof of that???? The only thing they are lacking is a production certificate. They would have to apply for a production certificate and they are good to go.that is exactly my point. the firm the document has been issued to, in this case , Cal Pacific Airmotive, is specifically prohibited by the FAA from producing new aircraft of the P-51 type. they have the right to repair and rebuild them but the right to produce is retained by Boeing until it chooses to build them or licence someone else to, and because of liability issues that is unlikely to happen
no, that is not at all what I am saying, let us say that Boeing sells a "New" P-51 that is identical to a WWII fighter for, say, $1,800,000. Let us then speculate that because of a minor failure of some small part supplied by a subcontractor, that the "new" P-51 crashes into a crowded shopping mall at the height of the Christmas shopping season. Let us suppose that a hundred shoppers are killed, scores more are wounded and several stores burn down. Because Boeing did not install a ballistic parachute recovery system they are held liable for the deaths, injuries and property damages which could amount to a billion or more dollars in jury awards. That is what I mean by liability issues. it is not a reflection on the P-51 but it is the nature of the lawsuit happy society we live in that causes it.
and I qoute the FAA "The TCDS is a formal description of the aircraft, engine or propeller. It lists limitations and information required for type certification including airspeed limits, weight limits, thrust limitations, etc."
in the TCDS you cite as proof that Cal Pacific Airmotive has the right to build the P-51,one of the limitations set forth on page 3 specifically prohibits them from building new production aircraft . The originator, Cavalier never produced new P-51's, it rebuilt and modifed them
"And that's because Cavalier or Cal Pacific Airmotive never applied for a manufacturing certificate" so you are saying that as of this moment, they are not allowed to produce new aircraft. that was my piont, what might happen in the future is speculative. the fact is that at this moment they are not allowed to because Boeing still retains that right until some future action changes the situation, So the correct answer at this partiular instant is that Boeing holds the rights which was the original question
If you look on page 3 of the PDF you link to, it specifically says on the right hand side of the line headed Production basis " production of new aircraft is not allowed"
I do not dispute the right to build a copycat or similar or for that matter identical aircraft, my point is that to build such an aircraft and legaly register the trademarked name "P-51 Mustang" as opposed to a P5151 or L51 or any of the other near designations requires Boeing's permission because they own the name. The qriginal question was who own's the rights to "P-51" and that is Boeing
Hello Norab,
Thank you for your inquiry. Yes, the P-51 Mustang is a trademark of The Boeing Company. You did not state your purpose, but I'm assuming it is related to a consumer product use. For all consumer product licensing questions, contact Gail Roth (gail.m.roth@boeing.com). Gail licenses Boeing logos and current and historical product trademarks for models, toys, software games, posters, cards, calendars, etc.
Regards,
Kevin
Kevin S. Kelly
Trademark and Copyright Licensing
Intellectual Property Management
Business Development Licensing
Images: www.BoeingImages.com
Trademarks: Boeing: Boeing Trademarks and Copyrights
-----Original Message-----
From norab
Sent: Wednesday, September 29, 2010 10:50 PM
To: GRP Trademarks
Subject-51 Mustang trademark
dear Sirs
does Boeing own the trademark for aircraft applications of the P-51
Mustang? What are the requirements for licencened use of this trademark
if it belongs to Boeing? Your aid in this matter is appreciated
Norab
that is exactly my point. the firm the document has been issued to, in this case , Cal Pacific Airmotive, is specifically prohibited by the FAA from producing new aircraft of the P-51 type. they have the right to repair and rebuild them but the right to produce is retained by Boeing until it chooses to build them or licence someone else to, and because of liability issues that is unlikely to happen
Simply Boeing, Lockheed, etc have attempted to cash in on model airplane, replica, etc products for many years but thus far few to zero have succombed to the implied threat of Trademark ownership.
Perhaps because it never occurred to Boeing (or NAA back in the day) to make an issue out of Cleveland, Revell, mongram, etc back in the 40's and 50's and thus lost out on a window for a legal challenge.
As a point of curiosity, Boeng's only possible trademark for model purpses might have been Model 299 versus B-17 - which was the US Government designation for the 299. Bell has a reasonable claim to model 205 but the Army designated it UH-1E and the nickname Huey certainly did not originate at Bell - their only opportunity to Copyright or Trademark 'Huey" would have been after it was a common slang name like Jug for P-47 or Thud for F-105.
FlyboyJ I will now share an email I sent to Boeing yesterday and their reply received today.
If you or any of the other members wish to, I suggest that you please contact Boeing directly, just as I did, for the information
No substitute for actualy talking to people. The fact that many firms apparently choose not to take legal action against firms and people who use trademarked names and designs in homebuilds, scale modelling, and computer flight sims, doesn't mean the trademark doesn't exist and that one could be prosecuted. As was hinted at by an earlier poster, Northrop-Grumman almost took the computer game makers Ubisoft and IC Maddox to the cleaners over the fact they included Grumman planes (Wildcats, Hellcats, and Avengers) in the combat flight sim "Pacific Fighters" without asking permission and paying for the rights to the names and images. The fact that the modern holders of other historic designs and trademarks chose not to claim rights doesn't mean they can't. Probably, many of them feel the inclusion of their trademarked names and aircraft in a computer game generated enough positive PR to make up for the small amout of money it would have taken Ubisoft to buy the rights. Anyway, this was a big stink in the IL-2 Sturmovik flight sim community.