>>507485399 (OP)Lol because the first one was a lie.
The number of cremation facilities needed to process 16,000 deceased soldiers depends on operational capacity, time constraints, and logistical factors. Below is a structured breakdown for planning purposes:
1. Assumptions & Baseline Calculations
Time per cremation: 3 hours (modern industrial crematorium, including cooling/processing).
Daily operating hours:
Single-shift (8 hrs/day): ~2โ3 cremations per machine per day.
24/7 operations: ~8 cremations per machine per day.
Facility capacity:
Small facility: 1โ2 machines.
Large facility (e.g., military/mass-disaster): 10โ20+ machines.
2. Scenarios & Facility Requirements
A. Civilian Crematoriums (Peacetime Standards)
1 machine per facility, running 8 hrs/day:
2.5 cremations/day 6,400 machine-days needed.
For 30 days: ~215 facilities required.
Limitation: Impractical for wartime repatriation; assumes no downtime.
B. Military/Disaster-Scale Operations
10 machines per facility, running 24/7:
8 cremations/day per machine 80/day per facility.
16,000 รท 80 = 200 facility-days.
For 30 days: ~7 large facilities needed.
Example: The U.S. Armyโs Joint Mortuary Affairs Centers could scale similarly in emergencies.
C. Extreme Historical Precedent (WWII-era)
Improvised cremation (open-air pyres, etc.):
50โ100 bodies/day per site (variable efficiency).
16,000 รท 100 = 160 site-days.
For 30 days: ~5โ6 mass sites (logistically grim; requires fuel/land).
3. Real-World Constraints
Logistics: Transport, storage, identification, and dignity protocols slow throughput.
Regulations: Most nations require individual processing (no mass cremation without consent).
Alternatives:
Burial: Faster but requires land (e.g., U.S. WWII temporary cemeteries).
Refrigeration: Buys time for staggered processing.