bentov
Electrical
- Feb 2, 2004
- 74
During field service at a food processer I asked for schematics, was told that due to a "falling out" with the original construction electrical contractor they are not available - management thought they paid for the job, wiring diagrams should be included, contractor says "my property".
I expect this comes up, must not be searching right as I can't find much in the threads here. I read about intellectual property/patentability, definition seems something like "not protected if reproduceable by others with ordinary skills" (I bet debating that point generates a lot of legal fees).
In this case more than a hundred MCC buckets are interlocked (for lines of conveyors, cleaners, loaders, etc., etc.), will have big material pileups if not sequenced/trip chained. There's no PLC, just switches, contacts, timers, etc. It's been possible so far to just take care with wiring (when changing buckets, though PITA if substituting VFD with xline and vice/versa given mix of control volts). I would certainly prefer the big picture though, as I'm finding the interlock doesn't always follow the physical layout/numbering of the buckets, so things are likely to get mixed up over time . . .
Is this a typical dispute then? I do custom control work myself (smaller scale), always felt obliged to provide an annotated schematic describing the intended operation, with all components and wires labelled (especially since most often me or my guys will be troubleshooting later, nice to have right there in the box). Maybe I'm giving too much away though? I notice here even the factory stuff has unlabeled control wires, guess that costs extra now - pretty frustrating having to identify everything before troubleshooting can begin . . .
I expect this comes up, must not be searching right as I can't find much in the threads here. I read about intellectual property/patentability, definition seems something like "not protected if reproduceable by others with ordinary skills" (I bet debating that point generates a lot of legal fees).
In this case more than a hundred MCC buckets are interlocked (for lines of conveyors, cleaners, loaders, etc., etc.), will have big material pileups if not sequenced/trip chained. There's no PLC, just switches, contacts, timers, etc. It's been possible so far to just take care with wiring (when changing buckets, though PITA if substituting VFD with xline and vice/versa given mix of control volts). I would certainly prefer the big picture though, as I'm finding the interlock doesn't always follow the physical layout/numbering of the buckets, so things are likely to get mixed up over time . . .
Is this a typical dispute then? I do custom control work myself (smaller scale), always felt obliged to provide an annotated schematic describing the intended operation, with all components and wires labelled (especially since most often me or my guys will be troubleshooting later, nice to have right there in the box). Maybe I'm giving too much away though? I notice here even the factory stuff has unlabeled control wires, guess that costs extra now - pretty frustrating having to identify everything before troubleshooting can begin . . .