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  1. #1
    Council Member davidbfpo's Avatar
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    Brilliant catch VCheng.

    One wonders how many of these industrial giants are scattered around the world, notably still working in Russia, the Ukraine and China.

    I recall until the late 1980's a UK WW2 munitions factory (ROF Nottingham) had the only machine capable of supplying US battleships with their main armament barrels.
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    Quote Originally Posted by davidbfpo View Post
    Brilliant catch VCheng.

    One wonders how many of these industrial giants are scattered around the world, notably still working in Russia, the Ukraine and China.

    I recall until the late 1980's a UK WW2 munitions factory (ROF Nottingham) had the only machine capable of supplying US battleships with their main armament barrels.
    Russia has a 75,000 ton press and China is building an 80,000 ton monster.

    We must never forget the basics of what made USA industry great, so that we can keep it on top for a long time to come.

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    Council Member davidbfpo's Avatar
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    Default History can help

    Working through the links on The Atlantic articles and then others I found this, another reminder of WW2 German industry acting as a catalyst for the victor's industrial strategy:
    This massive forging tool actually had its genesis during the days of World War II. Allied intelligence teams inspecting German aircraft downed behind our lines discovered that they contained extremely large and complex major structural elements. Our appraisal of the situation, confirmed immediately after the end of the war, was that the Germans had produced these aircraft components with the aid of huge forging and extrusion presses possessing capabilities far in excess of those in our own industrial complex.
    Link:http://www.clevelandareahistory.com/...s-matters.html

    Note three machines found by the US military, two taken back to the USA and the largest back to the USSR - in itself an interesting story.

    Ah yes, the Chinese have some and were building a very large one in 2011:http://www.chinatechgadget.com/china...ess-forge.html

    The author's later, parallel article refers to the Japanese building one too and has several fine pictures of the machines and their end products:http://boingboing.net/2012/02/13/machines.html
    davidbfpo

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    Very neat. I guess the laws of physics don't change over time. Or maybe, they didn't adhere to the modern engineering principle of "design life". Still, it's got to be a bear to maintain something that old and that big. You can't just go down to the hardware store if one of those 40 inch thick bolts crack.

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