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A question has come up on anoouhter thread: Did airbases during
W.W.I.I have mini-factories near-by able to assemble airplanes from a combination of recylced parts, mini-milled machine parts (ferrous parts and aluminium parts, but not organic parts), and new spare parts? I have seen several domumentaries were there are mentions of small industrial furnaces being deployed to the Pacific and new part milling, the robust repair and recylcing of Hurricanes, and in one documentary on the B-26 of whole plane final assemeble do right on base from parts from a vareity of sources. In addition, I have heard that on US aircraft carriers any metal aircraft part can be made on board using furnances and milling tools right on board: Is this so today? Was this so in W.W.I.I. ? How many airmen did the Allied airforces have ground working in England? How sophisticated and massive was aircraft maintence? Could they assemble a warplane? Could they make a new engine using badly damaged engines as the raw material? Also, the internet didn't have a great deal on on-base or near-base cottage warplane stuff, but it gets mentions in documeteries. John Freck |
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