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Tsung Xu's avatar

Great piece with a very high signal / noise ratio.

Also very very glad Knudsen gets his dues. I would put him right up there as one of the most impactful US immigrants in history, at least as it relates to progress and industry.

I think the near monopoly US industry had on mass manufacturing before WW2 is worth calling out. Ford and GM (with Knudsen a key player) were the absolute titans of industry from the mid 1910s through the start of the war.

Could the US have ramped aircraft production (and engine assembly) as quickly if not for the knowledge, process (like transfer machines as mentioned) and talent spillovers from the auto industry?

Neither Japan or Germany had anywhere close to the volume of auto production prior to WW2 either.

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Will O'Neil's avatar

This article is quite interesting and mostly (but not entirely) correct so far as I can tell, it is regrettable that it is so coy about sources in many cases. Many important assertions are entirely unsourced while for others the citations will be to cryptic for most readers.

One important cryptic source is, more fully, _Buying Aircraft: Matériel Procurement for the Army Air Forces_ by I. B. Holley (1964). As it is one of the U.S. Army's outstanding "Green Book" series of World War II histories it is not only still in print but available online in PDF at https://history.army.mil/html/books/011/11-2/CMH_Pub_11-2.pdf .

Much more difficult to find, unfortunately, is _Problems of Accelerating Aircraft Production During World War II_ by Tom Lilley, et al.

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