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Summary Of: Mass-production

A diagram of a typical mass-production factory looks more like the skeleton of a fish than a single line...

Encyclodia Page On: Mass-production

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| citations | verification | reliable references | challenged | | layout guide | lead section guidelines | talk page | Mass production of airplanes. | | Mass Production (band) | production lines | Henry Ford | Ford Model T | capital intensive | robots | machine presses | jigs | gauge blocks | Robots palletizing food (Bakery) | | assembly lines | Venice | pre-manufactured parts | assembly lines | Venice Arsenal | factory | Johannes Gutenberg | Bible | printing press | Industrial Revolution | Portsmouth Block Mills | Royal Navy | Napoleonic Wars | American Civil War | Springfield Armory | interchangeable parts | Armory practice | American System of Watch Manufacturing | dollar watches | American system of manufacturing | steam power | electrified | machinery | Alexis de Tocqueville | Democracy in America | wealth | Batch production | Craft production | Fast moving consumer goods | Industrial Design | Injection molding | Job production | Just In Time | Lean manufacturing | Manufacturing | Mass market | Pilot plant | Plastics | Production, costs, and pricing | Product cycle | Categories | History of science and technology in the United States | Manufacturing | Production and manufacturing | Industry | Articles needing additional references from April 2007 | Wikipedia introduction cleanup | All pages needing cleanup |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Mass-production".