Rusty Bowtie

General Category => General Discussion - Intros => Topic started by: themoose on December 18, 2017, 04:45:12 PM

Title: Seems like the only thing that the US mass produces these day is hamburgers
Post by: themoose on December 18, 2017, 04:45:12 PM
   
 Willow  Run B-24s -

The  long hanger at Willow Run, Michigan has a 90 degree turn in it so Henry  Ford would not have to pay taxes in the next county.  That short end  is being saved and restored today as a museum. The big hanger doors are  still operational after all these years.
 
This  is one of the best and most informative clips about a great American  accomplishment, thanks to the Ford Motor Company during WWII.
 
A  Ford Airplane! AMAZING!
 
Production  began here 6 months BEFORE Pearl Harbor!  Henry Ford was determined  that he could mass produce bombers just as he had with cars, so he built  the Willow Run assembly plant and proved it.  This was the world's  largest building under one roof at the time.  This film will  absolutely blow you away -- one B-24 every  55 minutes! -- and Ford  had its own pilots to test them.  And no recalls!
   
ADOLF HITLER HAD NO IDEA THE U.S.  WAS CAPABLE OF THIS KIND OF  THING.

Click here to watch video (https://www.youtube.com/embed/iKlt6rNciTo?rel=0)
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Title: Re: Seems like the only thing that the US mass produces these day is hamburgers
Post by: 62131 on December 18, 2017, 06:27:17 PM
Amazing that 1 every 55 minutes was produced. Wonder how many still survive.
Title: Re: Seems like the only thing that the US mass produces these day is hamburgers
Post by: TFoch on December 19, 2017, 12:59:34 PM
Very cool video.  Amazing they could produce them that quickly!
Thanks for posting Moose
Title: Re: Seems like the only thing that the US mass produces these day is hamburgers
Post by: Rattiac on December 19, 2017, 02:53:06 PM
A lot of history there , as well as GM powertrain.
Watched a few vids. Good stuff.
Title: Re: Seems like the only thing that the US mass produces these day is hamburgers
Post by: sammons on December 19, 2017, 03:31:35 PM
Cool video moose!

62131, quick answer is 4. ;)
 
Total production of B-24s was 18,400 (+/- data verys)
Willow Run plant produced nearly half, at 8,685 planes. The first Willow Run B-24 rolled off the assy line Sept 1942, the last one rolled off the line in May 1945. Avarage was 9-10 planes per day. Very impressive!

B-24 Survivors 16 total (+/- pending site info)
2 are airworthy and flying, 1 is possible of flight but has not been in the air in quite a few years.
13 are somewhat intact throughout the world, including the 4 remaining Willow Run built. Most of these are on static display needing total restoration before the possibility of becoming airworthy.

Title: Re: Seems like the only thing that the US mass produces these day is hamburgers
Post by: sixball on December 19, 2017, 09:06:18 PM
This is amazing stuff. I was born in June of '45. My mom, dad, and aunt built planes for Douglas in Tulsa (where I was conceived) and Covina (where  was born). When I was a kid on a trip from Texas to California we went past a place where surplus planes were sitting awaiting scrapping. They went from near the road lined up in rows and columns for miles as far as I could see. It probably took longer to scrap them than it did for Ford to build them. I think it was Braniff Airline DC7s that my aunt flew to Texas on in the 50s. They bellowed like thunder, shook the ground, and flames from the exhaust lit the night. I was relived when my aunt dressed to the 9s stepped out of that roaring shiny beast and walked down the gangway to safety on Earth. 
Title: Re: Seems like the only thing that the US mass produces these day is hamburgers
Post by: ghost28 on December 20, 2017, 10:14:10 AM
That's some really neat stuff guys.  thanks
Title: Re: Seems like the only thing that the US mass produces these day is hamburgers
Post by: themoose on December 20, 2017, 04:13:56 PM
Can you imagine how the young guys who had to fly these monsters into combat must have felt. Take a look at this video on one going through the start up procedure ...Awesome!!

Click to watch video (https://youtu.be/qOGow1WZIUU)
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