Act 147 Nitro dyes

New Haven is five hours behind London.

At noon in London, New Haven in winter has just ushered in the first morning light.

The workers of the Clayden Printing and Dyeing Factory, stepping on the frost on the ground, began to change shifts.

Workers have fully adapted to Doug's three-shift production model, and the factory is producing a steady stream of 24 hours a day.

The three-shift production model cannot be said to be humane, and workers generally have to work three shifts every two days, that is, the average working hours per day have reached 12 hours.

In the initial stage of capitalism, the methods used by the capitalists to extract surplus value were relatively simple and crude. Extending working hours is one of the simple and brutal methods.

However, compared to other factories, it is often once a day, and the working hours exceed 16 hours at a time. Life at Claydon Printing and Dyeing Factory is already a paradise.

However, even Heaven has not been quiet lately.

Freeman's new production line began trial operation.

Ross selected a group of female workers to participate in the production trials of the new production line.

The reason why these women workers participate in the trials is not because they are interested in the new production line and curious about new things, but because they are subsidized.

Female workers are very realistic, and they are still in a relatively low level from their vision to their ideals.

Freeman thought his production line would be ready for use, but Doug developed a testing process that seemed complicated.

Not only does the production line need to be able to move, but also the machine needs to be able to cope with pressure production.

To detect no downtime, how long can it work continuously without failure at a time.

Freeman was even asked to think about what problems might arise and to simulate scenarios for those possible problems.

Freeman was a little annoyed.

In this era, how can there be such a high test standard for the safety and stability of industrial equipment, and it is normal for even a steam engine to jump out with a rivet.

Doug's high standards and strict requirements obviously don't trust him.

Nor did Doug expect that his seemingly ordinary request would cause Freeman's displeasure.

Doug had no choice but to interview Freeman and tell him why he was setting so many standards and envisioning many of the contingencies that would happen in production.

Freeman believes that problems with the machine are nothing more than accidental.

However, Doug tells him that the problem with the machine is not accidental, but inevitable.

Problems can occur at any time, but as the operating time accumulates, so does the probability of problems.

Failures that seem almost impossible to happen now are bound to happen as long enough to be produced.

If it's bound to happen, why not solve it when it happens?

Because, once the production line is in normal production, every day, every moment, means a huge output.

If the machine keeps breaking, it not only interrupts the day's production, but also disrupts the entire production schedule.

Doug said a lot, but Freeman still had his reasons.

In the end, Doug only managed to convince Freeman.

After all, for someone like Freeman, it's not normal for a machine to break down every day.

Freeman left Doug's bedroom, and Doug put on his coat and planned to go to Yale Academy to meet his teacher, Principal Woolsey.

Although Doug is still in the cycle of colds, and the colds are not completely healed, his mental state and physical strength have returned to a high level.

This time, he went to see President Woolsey, not only to give him the original manuscript of the paper that he had already agreed to review, but also to bring him several copies of the reproduced "Monopoly" for him to see.

After all, Doug's treatment of the upper class of society in the United States and even the world, whether in the past or present life, is just chasing after the wind and hearsay.

He didn't know what the upper classes were thinking or what their preferences were.

Rather than savagely smash into that circle yourself, it is better to ask Principal Woolsey to guide and guide the way.

"Winnie, I'm going to Yale now, do you want to go back?" Douglas opened the office door and asked Winnie in the room outside the office.

"Do you want me to follow you?" asked Winnie.

"No, you don't. Doug shook his head.

"Sir, then I won't reply, I still have some information to verify with Williams. ”

The flowering period of the Caucasian race is very short, for example, Winnie is only nineteen years old this year, but with Doug's aesthetics, she is no longer a girl, and her appearance can be regarded as a very mature woman.

The dominant culture in the world today is led by Caucasians, that is, white people.

Because of the historical origins of missionaries, the upper class of the Western world generally has a special preference for little boys and little girls.

However, due to the short shelf life of the human race, their little boys and little girls are really little boys and little girls.

Despite the entry of the industrial revolution, the new productive forces and new relations of production have brought about new production relations, and the original upper class of society has begun to disintegrate.

However, liking little boys and little girls has also become a trend in the new high society.

Moreover, this trend has gradually spread from top to bottom and excessively.

Perhaps, in the future Western world, there will be an iron fist attack on pedophilia, and it is precisely because of this.

Is pedophilia guilty?

No!

The guilty thing is that pedophiles are poor and poor.

When Doug was even Winnie, he thought she was an old woman, but he didn't realize how dangerous he was.

When you stare into the abyss, the abyss stares back at you.

During Doug's cold, Doug finally has a personal carriage.

Although, from his point of view, the carriage was not a very good means of transport.

Hard and bumpy, and slow, it was destined to be replaced by a more comfortable car.

However, in this era when trains still use external combustion steam engines, the internal combustion engine is still a long way from practical application and the miniaturization of internal combustion engines.

Steam cars that did not rely on railroad tracks had already been born, but the steam engine could not be miniaturized, and the only product that was eventually developed was the steam bus.

Doug, who was bumping in the carriage, looked at the carriage of his own, felt the bump, and said to the coachman, "Go to Tom's cabin first." ”

Compared to the hired carriage, the wheels of his car have been upgraded from wooden wheels to hard rubber, but he feels that this is not enough, and he has to talk to Tom to see if he can design and build pneumatic tires.

However, he didn't have much hope for it.

Although Tom is powerful, his talent should be concentrated in the field of chemistry.

Pneumatic tires require more physical talent.

"Eh, Doug, why are you here? I was about to send someone to find you! I'm pretty much done with azo dyes, I've been working on nitro dyes lately, and guess what I found!"