The easy way to import toys for 3ds Max
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Thanks. I sent a PM to JanHas if he is involved in the recent cockpit, and if he has copyrights on it. Just to make 100% sure.
But he didn’t reply yet.Yes the splitting the model into parts is where I am stuck. I can’t delete any of the branches, to make the file smaller. (If that really is the reason for lod3dsconv to create empty 0MB files.
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The F-16C pit in BMS? Not JanHas’ work. His license is incompatbile with BMS. The cockpit in BMS is copyrighted, so you should not distribute it to other people once you do get it working. I believe the author was called Nanard? Last I heard, it was an eventual goal to replace the current pit because the author of the current pit is out of contact.
Sorry Ive not been able to help with LE. I recall I was able to get files into 3dsmax at least, but not how.
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Thanks for making that clear for me Blu3wolf. I should have checked copyright issues of the F16C pit first. As long as I cant get permission from Nanard to modify the pit the whole conversion does not make too much sense any more.
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Well, thats a whole other can of worms. Without getting too sidetracked from the discussion topic, I will point out that copyright doesnt prevent you from examining the model of the F-16C pit. Anything permitted either by fair use, or by the BMS license, is permissible. Opening the file, editing it, not problems - distributing that edited file though would not be legal without getting permission from the original author, as your version would be a derivative work of their original work (well, there is the fact that all software versions of the F-16 cockpit are derivative works of Lockheed Martins original work, but they dont seem to care about defending their IP in this regard).
If you wanted to examine the file and use it to measure dimensions, compare, etc, that isnt an issue. If you wanted to use it as a base for further work, then you would need to either secure permission from Nanard (who I believe is MIA for a decade?), or you would need to modify the resulting file so extensively that it constitutes an original work, not a derivative one. Unless Nanard comes back to sue you over it, you would be unlikely to land in legal trouble, but the BMS forum moderation is sensibly very sensitive to any suggestion of copyright infringement. Convincing them that the work is not derivative of the original file might be harder than the eyes of the law!
If you were to look at making your own pit files from scratch, Id look online for details of the cockpit. There are drawings available online, although the last good source I had for them seems to have taken down the drawings (xflight.de).
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Thanks for making that clear for me Blu3wolf. I should have checked copyright issues of the F16C pit first. As long as I cant get permission from Nanard to modify the pit the whole conversion does not make too much sense any more.
IIRC, Nanard posted something about it somewhere in the forum …
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Iirc he was vertical and stated that he will never provide the source files to the team, nor give license to anyone to edit or modify his model. Not 100% sure.
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Well thats a pity when people in a non profit project like BMS dont offer the community their work, to bring it to a higher level. Of course people using it will thankfully give credit. And in case people bring it to a lower level it’s gonna disappear quickly for sure. That regulation works either its payware or freeware in my opinion. But thats a lot off-topic now going on here. Thank you people for all the kind advice here.
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@Cloud:
So you’re saying he was a Stand Up Guy?!???!! [emoji14]
C9
Lol well no not that…
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