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How a teenager’s blueprint in a struggling US factory turned jammed wing lines into a wartime weapon — and helped flood the skies with fighters. January 1940. Frost on the windows, metal dust in the air, and an aircraft plant choking on its own complexity. Wing jigs jammed, ribs misaligned, skins fighting every fit — while war clouds thickened and production targets climbed into the impossible. Then, at the back of the drafting room, a blueprint from a teenage draughtsman quietly proposed heresy: wings built in modular sections that locked together in hours, not days. This is the story of how a new way of thinking — tighter tolerances, modular sub-assemblies, jigs that forced alignment instead of begging for it — cut wing times, cleared backlogs, and turned one factory into a model of wartime efficiency. From exhausted riveters to confident commanders reading rising output charts, this forgotten process shift helped turn industrial capacity into airpower — and shaped the postwar world of “snap-together” manufacturing we now take for granted. 🔔 Subscribe for more untold WW2 stories: / @SecretsWW2 👍 Like this video if you learned something new 💬 Comment below: What other WW2 tactics should we cover? #worldwar2 #ww2history #ww2 #wwii #secretsww2 ⚠ Disclaimer: This is entertainment storytelling based on WW2 events from internet sources. While we aim for engaging narratives, some details may be inaccurate. This is not an academic source. For verified history, consult professional historians and archives. Watch responsibly.