#31
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A sad thing seeing all these photos - with the eyes of today. But at least as it comes to the aircraft - there was simply neither need nor money to maintain tens of thousands of propeller driven fighters and bombers anymore after the war... and in addition, they were technically obsolete...
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#32
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Note: donating the war-surplus material was done after the decision to re-equip the Canadian Army with American-type equipment.
See http://www.nato.int/archives/1st5years/chapters/12.htm: Quote:
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Regards, Hanno -------------------------- |
#33
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There were industries founded not only on scrapping or modifying military equipment and selling either vehicles or parts, but on manufacturing new equipment from left over bits.
One example was Ferrucio Lamborghini who got his start by manufacturing tractors out of US surplus parts. The sports cars came later. A less "sexy" example in Canada were the "army wagons" built from leftover CMP parts. They used to be common here in Ontario and one still occasionally turns up at a farm auction. It probably wouldn't take much digging to turn up hundreds of companies set up to re-use surplus parts. As the supply of parts dried up, some of them called it a day, while others moved on to other manufacturing. |
#34
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Cma
" The Canadian mutual aid programme began in 1950 ..." - well, no it didn't, at least the first Canadian Mutual Aid programme didn't: it was a wartime measure for supplying allied countries with equipment and raw materials.
The Canadian Mutual Aid Act became law on 20 May 1943. The Act charged that the Canadian Mutual Aid Board ' contribute, exchange, deliver, transfer to or possession of or otherwise make available, war supplies to any of the [allies] other than Canada.' The purpose was to enable those of the [allies] who are short of Canadian dollars to continue to draw supplies from Canada to meet their essential wartime needs.' Australia was the happy recipient of a considerable quantity of materiel under the CMA programme, importing goods and materials from Canada to the value of $87M during 1942 (including $9M in freight costs) and an estimated $90M in the period April 1943 to March 1944. (The 1942 payments made before the Act came into force were credited to the CMA account.) Mike |
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