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June 21, 2007

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Comments

rodcorp

"If we have not covered any US innovations after a year, we have done something wrong but I think the balance will be OK."

Proximity fuses might be a good example. http://www.enginesofinnovation.com/html/proximity_fuse_case_study.HTM

Or, at the macro level, the oft-quoted trope that the US's advantage was out-production via a stronger economic engine/more efficient factories. Not so much a turning point as a gathering-of-momentum, I suppose.

Max Gadney

I agree on both counts. I think proximity fuses and especially their use against kamikaze planes are very interesting and I am reearching the nmatter at the moment. And on the second point, I am wondering what the best device is with which to explain the production effort of the US. One idea is to show the difference in engineering between the Thompson M1A1 and the M3 'Grease Gun'. The 'Grease Gun' was not so beatifully made, but like the PPSh-41, it was this fact that enabled it to be mass produced. We will return to this point but anyone wanting to reflect further on this war of attrition angle could do alot worse than read Wartime by Paul Fussell.

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