newenglanders
Junior Member
NH
A manufacturer has discontinued support for one of its products. Parts are no longer available from them. The few available secondary market (NOS) parts have become prohibitively expensive. I designed alternative parts (for my personal use) that eliminate many of the issues that plagued the OEM parts...problems the manufacturer never bothered to address even back when it was selling replacement parts.
The defect in the original design became such a safety issue that owners simply quit using the product...even though there was never a formal recall (about which I am aware anyway). And those who did buy replacement parts ended up in the same boat within months.
My question is: May I make my replacement parts available to the many hundreds of thousands of people who purchased this product and cannot use it (without suitable parts) and for which they can no longer obtain replacement parts from the manufacturer?
I should mention that the manufacturer did release a new version of the product. It has the same exact safety/reliability issue but its parts are not interchangeable with the previous version. Does a manufacturer's decision to discontinue support for a product (planned obsolescence, if you will) enable others to create replacement parts without violating design patent laws?
Thanks in advance.
NE
A manufacturer has discontinued support for one of its products. Parts are no longer available from them. The few available secondary market (NOS) parts have become prohibitively expensive. I designed alternative parts (for my personal use) that eliminate many of the issues that plagued the OEM parts...problems the manufacturer never bothered to address even back when it was selling replacement parts.
The defect in the original design became such a safety issue that owners simply quit using the product...even though there was never a formal recall (about which I am aware anyway). And those who did buy replacement parts ended up in the same boat within months.
My question is: May I make my replacement parts available to the many hundreds of thousands of people who purchased this product and cannot use it (without suitable parts) and for which they can no longer obtain replacement parts from the manufacturer?
I should mention that the manufacturer did release a new version of the product. It has the same exact safety/reliability issue but its parts are not interchangeable with the previous version. Does a manufacturer's decision to discontinue support for a product (planned obsolescence, if you will) enable others to create replacement parts without violating design patent laws?
Thanks in advance.
NE