>>5861929You have to remove the ashes, the bricks break after about 100 hours, the oven needs to heat a body up and then burn.
If you just google it the zog ai system says
"The cremation process, from start to finish, typically takes between 2 to 3 hours, but can vary depending on factors like body size and the efficiency of the crematory's equipment. The actual burning takes approximately 3 hours, followed by processing the remaining remains, which can add another 1-2 hours.
Here's a more detailed breakdown:
Actual Burning:
The body is placed in a retort (the cremation chamber) and heated to high temperatures (around 1600 degrees Fahrenheit). The process of burning the body and reducing it to bone fragments usually takes around 2-3 hours.
Processing:
After the burning, the remaining bone fragments are still too hot to handle. They need to cool down before they can be processed into fine ashes. This cooling and processing stage can add another 1-2 hours to the overall time.
Factors Influencing Time:
Body size is a significant factor. Smaller bodies may cremate faster than larger ones. The efficiency of the crematory's equipment and the type of container the body is placed in can also impact the time. "
But these are now over 80 year outdated crematoriums, were heated in pairs and needed renovation frequently which took hours to cool down, repair and bring up to temperature.
Plus these were cork fired, and the needed cork has no evidence of transport. Also humans are very hard to burn. Further starving them does not help the situation as you are removing fuel and resulting in more water content (%), that will wick heat out of the crematorium.
While some aspects of the design will be different presuming one would favor volume over efficiency, the btu's and ash expected is simply not accounted for. The logistics are impossible, and would need a lot of accountant work to make it feasible which simply isn't there in any form of a paper trail.