If I could add to Ten's Reply,
Brothers Robert and Earle Irwin were already filling orders for furniture needed by Ordnance when they stepped into a 'Arranged agreement'
at the Ordnance Departments urging with John Pedersen. A Shotgun Wedding would best describe it.
Quoting Robert Irwin " Pedersen was a capable gun designer, he was not a practical production man".
I think this was a polite way of saying getting Pedersen in to Mass Production mode was a problem. There was no time for hand fitting like done in Pedersen's earlier gun making career. Pedersen's hiring of George Oliver to Supervise and set up machinery and actual manufacturing was a disaster. Oliver was said to have one speed and a chronic procrastinator. Oliver had no experience dealing with or lobbying Ordnance for needed equipment. Compare that to the hard nosed Doerfner's style of saying NO.
Though they entered a contract based on a cost-plus basis. Robert Irwin also noted roughly from my memory that: Pedersen didn't push toward assembly line type production and preferred the one at a time perfection style.
Pedersen was well known for his earlier Pre WWII designs on the East coast. He had the connections out East, but was sent to Detroit Ord Dep.
Anyone ever wonder why ?
But this was the Detroit Ordnance Department that already knew the Irwins from the Co-Op they helped form of the Grand River Valley. A group of local businesses put together to offer and receive War Time contracts. Doerfner with his General Motors contacts had deep connections in the Detroit Ord Dept.
Production was delayed while trying to get all the in short supply/needed machinery.
IR-IP had start up problems like all the prime makers did.
Read about all the mis-threaded barrels WRA had to fix and recall for one example.
Doerfner came in roughly the first of Dec 1942 to a mess. Parts being hand fitted because of the lack of machinery.
The use of templates that required constant recalculating and refitting from station to the next station/ step was log jamming any production.
Doerfner noted this right away.
Sound like it's getting pricey $$ now? (
Cost-Plus++)
As late as IIRC Feb of 1943 IR-IP still wasn't up to speed on needed equipment.
Contract cancelled in March. SG takes over April 1.
The Irwin family was able to keep a government contract to continue making stocks for the carbine effort after the cancelled IP contract. In fact when Saginaw Steering Gear took over the operations, the Irwin employees became employees of Saginaw Gear.
John Pedersen held no shares in the Irwin-Pedersen Arms Company and functioned as the arms consultant, with a monthly salary of $2000.
The Irwins were having problems with John Pedersen, George Oliver, Ordnance Sub Contractors, Inspectors and the Army Ordnance Department in Detroit.
In Robert Irwin's log he tells of securing parts CLEARED by inspectors at other carbine manufacturers, only to have inspectors reject them at his plant.
Robert Irwin knew their overhead and cost per unit was to high.
In May of 42 the Irwins learned, without conferring with them that John Pedersen had hired George Oliver of the E.W. Bliss Company in Brooklyn, New York as a production manager at a annual salary of $18,000 and was sending him to Grand Rapids to supervise and oversee the set up of machinery along with manufacturing.
A pricey sum in it's day.
Anyone catch that: May of 42..... Pedersen hires Oliver to supervise and oversee the set up of machinery along with manufacturing.
And repeating from above: Doerfner came in roughly the first of Dec 1942 to a mess. Parts being hand fitted because of the lack of machinery.
Much of this info comes from a daily log kept by Mr. Robert Irwin during the War Time Production.
The Irwin Seating Company is still in business today. They've been kind enough to pass along to me excerpts from Robert's log during WWII.
IP Parts: Though Robert Irwin seen that Pedersen was not a Production man. He noted he was a perfectionist. Pedersen's earlier projects were considered some of the best built arms in the US (See Hatchers opinion). IMO I would expect any IP made part or receiver made that was accepted as being very high quality.
Lastly to Eddie,
My Top
M1
Carbine would be my Fathers. Snuck home from the Philippines with the help of 2 of his Aussie friends.
