Reading Derek's thread, and the discussion about the market for planes, led me to wonder, "Does anybody know how many planes were made?" How many No 4s are out there? I can't guess even the order of magnitude. 1 million? 100 million?
There's no way to calculate a total, obviously, and a huge proportion must have been scrapped, but does anyone know any actual statistics to put some real numbers into the picture? Maybe some of the hardcore Stanley collectors will have heard of production records from the company accounts. If we have any economic historians on here, they might be able to find historical stats about imports or exports. Maybe there are written descriptions of visits to Sheffield with boasts of how many thousand planes are made each year?
The only example I can offer myself is from back in the early days - the Reeses' book on Christopher Gabriel and the C18th Tool Trade says that the inventory for 1800 shows 1655 completed planes in stock, plus 28,160 part completed. That's not actually a measure of turnover, and the accounts that would show turnover have not survived. However they offer a guess that the stock could represent about three years' supply so we could say, very roughly, that the firm could have been making something in the order of 10,000 planes a year. That was all hand work at the bench of course!
There's no way to calculate a total, obviously, and a huge proportion must have been scrapped, but does anyone know any actual statistics to put some real numbers into the picture? Maybe some of the hardcore Stanley collectors will have heard of production records from the company accounts. If we have any economic historians on here, they might be able to find historical stats about imports or exports. Maybe there are written descriptions of visits to Sheffield with boasts of how many thousand planes are made each year?
The only example I can offer myself is from back in the early days - the Reeses' book on Christopher Gabriel and the C18th Tool Trade says that the inventory for 1800 shows 1655 completed planes in stock, plus 28,160 part completed. That's not actually a measure of turnover, and the accounts that would show turnover have not survived. However they offer a guess that the stock could represent about three years' supply so we could say, very roughly, that the firm could have been making something in the order of 10,000 planes a year. That was all hand work at the bench of course!