Gawdzilla Sama
TImeToSweepTheLeg
Tactic rather than technology.
50,000 Sherman tanks, for example. Vs. ~483 King Tigers. Every other number is just as out of proportion. "Detroit is on the front!"
The 50,000 T-34, KV, and JS not built in Detroit tanks may have helped some too.
And the 25,000 British built tanks also marginally outnumbered the total Panzer III, IV, Panther and Tiger production as well.
You didn't mention Higgins boats, Liberty ships and the jeep!
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Production technology.
It wouldn´t have mattered if the Allies hadn´t had all those fancy modern gadget, as long as they could bury the Axis under heaps of newly built tanks, planes and warships.
I don't think you can state a single most important thing in a war as massive as WWII. There are dozens of Allied inventions that were critical to the war.
You didn't mention Higgins boats, Liberty ships and the jeep!
BTW: I thought the Norden bombsight was more myth than reality and that it was pretty much outdated by the start of US involvement.
Wasn't the mass production of penicillin figured out during WWII? I would rate that quite highly.
My vote goes to this too. Specifically, not only the capacity but also the philosophy: to build things that are "good enough", but are easy to build in vast quantities. Others have already mentioned the vast numbers of Shermans and T-34's that were churned out. Individually, those tanks were no match for the German Tiger, but the numbers produced say all. By comparison, the Germans lost themselves in ever more convoluted designs.
Wasn't the mass production of penicillin figured out during WWII? I would rate that quite highly.
Yeah, I agree... there were many significant inventions, as well as some intelligent decisions by soldiers and leaders (e.g. to mass produce "simpler" weapons), as well as (in some cases) pure dumb luck.I don't think you can state a single most important thing in a war as massive as WWII. There are dozens of Allied inventions that were critical to the war.
But was there anything about the liberty ship that was any sort of technical innovation? (I just assumed that they were significant simply because they were mass produced.)You didn't mention Higgins boats, Liberty ships and the jeep!
You might be right. The Wikipedia suggests that there were certain factors it didn't handle well (wind sheer, etc.), although part of the problem might have been that some bombsights weren't tested or maintained properly.BTW: I thought the Norden bombsight was more myth than reality and that it was pretty much outdated by the start of US involvement.
I'd like to see some numbers of how many tanks, aircraft etc. the respective countries produced, fielded and lost, if possible.
I'd like to see some numbers of how many tanks, aircraft etc. the respective countries produced, fielded and lost, if possible.
I wonder about obscure, mundane stuff that might go unnoticed. Were there differences between the two sides in what kinds of stuff the average soldier carried while marching from town to town... a gun less likely to jam or needing reloading less often or easier to aim... faster lighter ammo you could carry more of... boots less likely to cause blisters or infections... better preserved food or food containers making them less dependent on new supplies... better camouflage... more or better radios to make them better at coordinating with other units and aircraft... better binoculars or telescopes...? But I've never heard any such differences being discussed.
Not sure if it's a technology or a philosophy or just a way of life, but the Allies understood logistics in a way that the Axis never really did. I'd probably rank codebreaking above logistics as war-winning technologies for the Allies, but logistics was still a huge (if unglamorous) factor.
what good are extra tanks if there is no fuel to run them
or no transport to move the shells for the gun to the front
or trained men to man them
germans built plenty of jet aircraft air frames in the late war period
but lacked jet engines to power them
or fuel for the motors
and trained pilots to fly them
but they had 1000 or more airframes ready to go that never got off the ground
supply and logistics is the main tech the allies got right
true the liberty ship was low tech but the ability to build them fast and
use the liberty ship to move vast quantity of stuff to the right place on time
was a very deciding factor
I wonder about obscure, mundane stuff that might go unnoticed.