This posting has nothing to do with claimed throughput of the ovens, but the affects of so many cremation processes would have on the refractory lining inside the ovensborjastick wrote: ↑Sat Mar 15, 2025 9:42 am Please understand that your calculations are fundamentally incorrect. By that I mean that in Auschwitz time there are anything between 32 and 217 hours in a day. Thus the practical processing of bodies through each oven was variable depending on the time of the month, the number of train loads coming in (including those trains that went elsewhere as they were all included in the number of dead Hungarians) and the exaggeration factor which is essential to the holocaust story.
When you add in peripheral claims such as one body can be burned in 12 minutes and fifteen bodies could be stuffed inside one oven and they would burn even quicker, then you can do a calculation and arrive at a respectable estimate of between 400,000 and 1.6m Hungarians transported into Auschwitz, gassed and cremated all before afternoon tea on July 12th 1944.
It's very simple when you think about it, fantasize and lie.
Oh and one last thing is to realise that about 200,000 Hungarian jews appeared back in Hungary alive and well after the war as shown in the work of The Dissolution of European Jewry.
Exterminationists claim about 30% of the Hungarian jews went out the chimney as smoke never to be seen or heard from again.borjastick wrote: ↑Sat Mar 15, 2025 9:42 am Please understand that your calculations are fundamentally incorrect. By that I mean that in Auschwitz time there are anything between 32 and 217 hours in a day. Thus the practical processing of bodies through each oven was variable depending on the time of the month, the number of train loads coming in (including those trains that went elsewhere as they were all included in the number of dead Hungarians) and the exaggeration factor which is essential to the holocaust story.
When you add in peripheral claims such as one body can be burned in 12 minutes and fifteen bodies could be stuffed inside one oven and they would burn even quicker, then you can do a calculation and arrive at a respectable estimate of between 400,000 and 1.6m Hungarians transported into Auschwitz, gassed and cremated all before afternoon tea on July 12th 1944.
It's very simple when you think about it, fantasize and lie.
Oh and one last thing is to realise that about 200,000 Hungarian jews appeared back in Hungary alive and well after the war as shown in the work of The Dissolution of European Jewry.
Yahweh personally made sure that it did not rain during this period. This is how the Jews solve the problems and gaps in their myths. The more religious ones ask where God was in the Holocaust? And they answer that he was inside the ovens.Fred Ziffel wrote: ↑Wed Mar 19, 2025 8:01 am Burn in the rain, May I mention the weather?
One other issue that is not taken into consideration much is if the Germans were indeed conducting burn pit operations outside, what affect will rain or even thunderstorms would have on the burn?
I know it does not rain everyday in southern Poland, but it does rain. What kind of mess would the Germans have on their hands. Potentially water, half burnt wet wood, half burnt bodies? Or they build the burn, and then it begins to rain? All the wood is wet, the bodies are wet, water at the bottom of all that mass of wood and human carcasses that are also 60 to 70% water? Wait till it all dries out and try again? Was everyday a good day for a burn?
If 434K to 437K went up in smoke in the said 6 weeks, absolutely no interruption can happen.
The attachment is the average precipitation for Krakow Poland. The Hungarian burn was said to have begun May 17, 1944 and lasted till August of that year. Now look at the average precipitation for Krakow. Was the weather a concern? From May to August, we are looking at a potential of 38 days of rain and over 1/4 of the time period of the alleged outside burn event
I will give a total of 110 days for the operation: 38 rain days / 110 days = 34.5% of the time period it could be rain?
Nessie gave a flamboyant answer, as if that would solve anything.Wetzelrad wrote: ↑Tue Jan 06, 2026 11:14 am I would like to know where is the establishment's response to this topic? Is there going to be any attempt at a response to this, or is it irrefutable?
Summarizing Mattogno, this is the actual or estimated number of cremations that an oven muffle was able to withstand before the refractory bricks had to be replaced:
According to the experts, Crematorium II was the site of 400,000 (Pressac) to 500,000 (Van Pelt) cremations. Divided across its 15 muffles, this would mean 26,667 to 33,333 cremations per muffle. Yet the refractory bricks of this and the other three Birkenau crematoria somehow never had to be replaced.
- Paris 1889: 2,500 cremations (per muffle)
- Erfurt electric furnace 1935: 1,294 cremations
- Erfurt electric furnace 1939: 2,910 cremations
- Erfurt unspecified furnace: "about 2,000 cremations"
- Gusen 1941: 1,445 cremations
- Auschwitz I: less than 800 cremations
- Bow Valley Crematorium 1985: 1,500-3,000 cremations (Link)
- Ener-Tek II: "many thousands of cremations before repair"
(Cremas II and IV did actually have refractory work done once, shortly after they were put into operation, and done on the chimney and ducts, not on the muffles. Problems with the forced-draft system and with unanticipated thermal expansion caused damage and partial collapse to the refractory bricks. This is what is actually documented, and it is the actual reason for which Prüfer came to Birkenau on this occasion. Prüfer later told his captors that the reason for the trip was because of "colossal strain", as Nessie randomly quoted above, but this is not documented and actually contrary to the documents from that period.)
Replacing the refractory bricks would take the whole crematorium out of commission for a week, minimum, and it would involve considerable labor and material costs. If this had happened at Cremas II-V it should appear in the Topf invoices and correpondence. Why doesn't it?

