Sorry to trouble y'all again on this, but does anyone know where to find this as a book or service? So far I'm not having too much luck. I'm a touch of a bibliophile and have quite a few books on the Springfield, but I don't have the SRS book. I would like to try to find a good rifle for my boy, who was out of Pendleton years back as a surprise.
SRS Springfield Research Service
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The SRS books four in number except their are two v-4 books you would want the 1999 one as it has a huge number of 1903 rifles over the 1995 issue. Check ABEbooks .com or any book finder site, some show up on e-bay. Just to warn you a full set will cost over one thousand dollars. The service used to be free on line but a new owner took it private and you have to join his site to ask for information but only by snail mail.Last edited by Tom Trevor; 01-13-2017, 02:53. -
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Gee. I sold mine, plus many of the newsletters that were sent out before books were printed, for 500! (several years ago tho).The SRS books four in number except their are two v-4 books you would want the 1999 one as it has a huge number of 1903 rifles over the 1995 issue. Check ABEbooks .com or any book finder site, some show up on e-bay. Just to warn you a full set will cost over one thousand dollars. The service used to be free on line but a new owner took it private and you have to join his site to ask for information but only by snail mail.You can never go home again.Comment
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Id simply ask for a serial number to be looked up. People are always are willing to do so that own the volumes.
Also keep in mind, more Serials are still found by people researching where Frank Mallory left off...not in the SRS.Last edited by Roadkingtrax; 01-14-2017, 10:16."The first gun that was fired at Fort Sumter sounded the death-knell of slavery. They who fired it were the greatest practical abolitionists this nation has produced." ~BG D. UllmanComment
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I hear a member on here, CplNorton has been finding a lot of new USMC serial numbers through his work. Check with him.Comment
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Good Advice!
It is my understanding that Steven and several other folks are discovering new documents through National Archives research? In some cases he's even discovering new information in regards to Marine sniper programs. Exciting time to see people willing to invest the time and resources to do so."The first gun that was fired at Fort Sumter sounded the death-knell of slavery. They who fired it were the greatest practical abolitionists this nation has produced." ~BG D. UllmanComment
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My first book was the DCM sales book. I use it all the time thats the small blue book. I bought in that in the mid 80's. What is that going for now. I also have the 4 volume set. Haven't seen one for sale in a long time.Comment
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Discus, it was a matter of time until someone dis-assembled the books and scanned them. Until you came along I considered my set a collectible and an investment. I don't think they're worth any more than the paper they're printed on now that you digitalized it.
I'm sure you checked but is there any intellectual property attached to the books?Comment
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Frank had a digital set even back then. They were very expensive, and not common. And the guys who bought them guarded them very closely. I imagine someone got a hold of this digital version and they are just selling a copy of the file. It would just be as simple as a click of a mouse to send them out.Discus, it was a matter of time until someone dis-assembled the books and scanned them. Until you came along I considered my set a collectible and an investment. I don't think they're worth any more than the paper they're printed on now that you digitalized it.
I'm sure you checked but is there any intellectual property attached to the books?
Legally, I don't know how you could do it, without written permission from Wayne or whoever owns the copyright info now.
The other thing in this, now with it being sold in this digital fashion. It only takes one other person who buys it, to realize they can sell it for a few dollars cheaper and make money as well. So once that starts, I think most can figure out the outcome.Comment
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I'm not a lawyer (don't even own a three piece suit), but I do have a passing familiarity with copyright law. US government records are in the public domain from the moment they're created. The matter doesn't end there, however. Copyright is about establishes a property right in intellectual activity.
Coming up with a new interpretation of a government document is an intellectual activity - the act produces something that never existed before. The dividing line is necessarily fuzzy, but an act such as alphabetizing a list of entries in a government report doesn't create anything new, and, thus, is not protected. However, it could be argued that assembling similar data from widely scattered locations and presenting it as a compilation (as Frank did) is. There was intellectual activity in figuring out where to look, determining the data from different sources was relevant, etc.
If you published the photo of the flag raising on Mt. Suribachi, that would not be eligible for copyright protection. However,if you wrote a new caption for the photo, that part would be protected.
The current law no longer requires that you register your work to gain protection, but as a practical matter, if you don't register it upon publication, your prospects of finding a lawyer to take the case are nil (registering it, assuming it's a valid claim, provides for the pursuit of attorney's fees and also treble damages for economic losses). Since cases have to be filed in federal court in the district where the violation occurred, there's no path forward without a lawyer with expertise in the field. If you timely filed your copyright registration, however, there are plenty of lawyers who would take the case on a contingency basis and write a demand letter for 'go away' money in a settlement with no intention of going to court.
Fair use is another intentionally fuzzy concept in the law, but quoting brief passages from a copyrighted work for the purpose of discussion is protected, so nobody here is at risk. The sometimes cited, "All you have to do is give credit for the author" before quoting beyond fair use is an invalid assertion.Comment

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