Comments by "mpetersen6" (@mpetersen6) on "Machine Thinking" channel.

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  2. One reason I would think was demand on the part of the buyers or the lack of them. A second was the whole Craft System with Masters, Journeymen and Apprentices. This involved a whole different approach to production of every thing from cloth to metal working to cathedrals. Third was a preceived need. Another reason was the need of the State for the tools of the State. Ships and Arms. Edged weapons were made one at a time by blacksmiths and specialists in armor and blades. They did not need to be interchangeable. Once cannon with standardized bores and small arms became common it was required to produce ever increasing accuracy in manufacture. The first "machine tools" where most likely the ones made for boring cannon to the desired bore diameter. The first known industrial workshop for the production of interchangeable parts was in Southampton or Portsmouth. The Royal Navy set up an operation to make block and tackle for its ships. Before that things like Muskets (the Tower Pattern Musket, ie The Brown Bess) where made to a pattern but where not interchangeable. But once the screw cutting lathe made its appearance the world was changed forever. It brought the Industrial Age with all its benefits and problems. An industrial revolution could of happened 1500 to 2000 years before it did. The Romans are known to have large watermills with multiple mill wheels set up in series so that the water spilling from one mill would turn the wheel of the next. The principles of Gear Wheels were certainly known (that is one thing you need for a screw cutting lathe besides the leadscrew). For centuries the Chinese were the most technologically advanced society on Earth. But the social systems and conditions did not allow such a revolution to burst forth.
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