Shortround6
Major General
How do you figure that?
Ostmark was built to produce Jumo 222A engines. You cannot change tooling and retrain workers for Daimler-Benz production simply by signing an order. You will lose an entire year of production (about 6,000 Jumo 222A engines) during the conversion process.
Except there was no work force trained to produce 500 Jumo 222s a month. How much specialized tooling actually existed?
It took American Factories anywhere from 5 months to over a year from start of production to reach 500 a month and a lot of those factories hit 1000 a month just 3-6 months later.
If you are building similar engines ( changing from one water cooled engine to another or from one air-cooled engine to another) the time to change over is much shorter. This assumes you are actually building engines in quantity already. If you have people trained to machine pistons they don't need a year of retraining to machine a different piston.
Installing the machinery takes time, making jigs and fixtures takes time, but many factories that made large numbers of engines operated many machines in parallel, dozens of machines doing the same operation. It may take time to fit them ALL with new jigs or fixtures but some production can start fairly soon. It also ridiculous to believe that the Ostmark was fully tooled up (jigs and fixtures included) before they produced the first few dozen engines. That would have been a waste of resources, having vast numbers of machine tools sitting idle until every single machine was in place and fitted with it's own particular jig or fixture.
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