A HISTORY OF EDISON'S WEST ORANGE LABORATORY 1887-1931

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VIII-34 was called upon manufacture bewildering range machines. The absence routine for making design changes and the lack clear lines authority created an atmosphere the Works where standardization design and manufacture was virtually impossible. The conversion kits were difficult make and install, making life more complicated for the Phonograph Works and the dealer network. Even after a design change was made, there still remained the long and arduous process changing drawings and making sure the new product was standardized. One engineer recalled that "New models chased themselves through the factory . The Works was loosely organized facility that manufactured everything from kinetoscopes numbering machines. This naturally added more variants phonograph line that was already crowded with numerous models and types. Edison had policy that his customers should not left with obsolete machinery, and subsequently each new model design change was accompanied conversion kit adopt old machines. was production engineer's nightmare: do-all general purpose factory, with central task stabilized engineering designs, and few long production runs. The Works was inundated with design changes and often had manufacture products before the laboratory finished the design. was case every foreman for himself and few records were kept. The introduction the Amberol record, for example, led the creation mechanical devices convert existing phonographs play the 4-minute cylinder