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ID: 96kLwf4M/pol/509630584#509635117
7/6/2025, 7:50:50 AM
>>509630584
Who do you think you're talking to?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4AdClmPD6r4
Here, check this out:
The crematoria at Auschwitz-Birkenau were coke-fired ovens, not gas or electric, according to Topf & Sons plans and SS operational records.
SS Supply Records (1942–1944): Auschwitz-Birkenau operational logs, archived at the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum, document coke deliveries to the camp. A 1943 requisition order lists 3.5–6 tons daily for Crematoria II–V during peak use (e.g., Hungarian deportations, May–July 1944). These supplies came from the Reichswerke Hermann Göring steelworks in Silesia, per a 1942 SS contract, and local Polish coal mines (e.g., Jaworzno), as noted in a 1943 transport schedule.
Production Capacity: A 1943 SS industrial report estimates Silesian coke output at 1,000 tons daily, with 0.5–1% allocated to Auschwitz based on priority orders. The camp’s proximity to coal-rich Upper Silesia (50–100 km) facilitated regular rail deliveries, documented in a 1944 logistics memo.
Quantity Check: For 4,756 bodies daily (Topf & Sons capacity), each requiring 50–100 kg of coke (per a 1943 Topf efficiency study), the total need is 238–476 tons daily. The 3.5–6 tons logged suggests overloading or supplementary methods (e.g., open pits), as the recorded amount covers only 1.5–2.5% of the theoretical demand, indicating possible underreporting or alternative disposal.
Who do you think you're talking to?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4AdClmPD6r4
Here, check this out:
The crematoria at Auschwitz-Birkenau were coke-fired ovens, not gas or electric, according to Topf & Sons plans and SS operational records.
SS Supply Records (1942–1944): Auschwitz-Birkenau operational logs, archived at the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum, document coke deliveries to the camp. A 1943 requisition order lists 3.5–6 tons daily for Crematoria II–V during peak use (e.g., Hungarian deportations, May–July 1944). These supplies came from the Reichswerke Hermann Göring steelworks in Silesia, per a 1942 SS contract, and local Polish coal mines (e.g., Jaworzno), as noted in a 1943 transport schedule.
Production Capacity: A 1943 SS industrial report estimates Silesian coke output at 1,000 tons daily, with 0.5–1% allocated to Auschwitz based on priority orders. The camp’s proximity to coal-rich Upper Silesia (50–100 km) facilitated regular rail deliveries, documented in a 1944 logistics memo.
Quantity Check: For 4,756 bodies daily (Topf & Sons capacity), each requiring 50–100 kg of coke (per a 1943 Topf efficiency study), the total need is 238–476 tons daily. The 3.5–6 tons logged suggests overloading or supplementary methods (e.g., open pits), as the recorded amount covers only 1.5–2.5% of the theoretical demand, indicating possible underreporting or alternative disposal.
ID: mpdOaPn1/pol/509632727#509633294
7/6/2025, 7:07:04 AM
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