Aircraft: 18865 (including combat aircraft 17000, accounting for 30% of the total output of the Soviet Union);
Tanks and self-propelled guns: 12537 (accounting for 24% of the total output of the Soviet Union);
Anti-aircraft guns: 7944 guns (Soviet anti-aircraft guns are the most scarce);
Anti-tank guns: 5,800;
Ships and boats: 672;
Submachine gun:108,293;
Machine guns: 4,005;
Anti-tank guns: 4932 guns;
Shells: 20 million rounds;
Submunition: 450 million rounds;
Explosives: 320,000 tons;
Propellant for bullets and shells: 6.5438+0.5 million tons;
Refined oil: 2.58 million tons (of which aviation gasoline is 65,438+0.4 times the total output of the Soviet Union);
Steel: 2.59 million tons (mostly high-quality steel and special steel, of which armored steel accounts for 50% of the total output of armored steel in the Soviet Union, and many tanks produced in the Soviet Union use 94 American-aided armored steel);
Aluminum: 328,000 tons (65,438+0.25 times the total output of the Soviet Union, which solved the problem of extreme shortage of aluminum for aircraft manufacturing in the Soviet Union, and the Soviet Union lost 60% of its aluminum production capacity before the war);
Copper: 387,600 tons (accounting for 83% of the total output of the Soviet Union);
Tin: 29,400 tons;
Cars: 427,000 vehicles (65,438+0.5 times the total output of the Soviet Union, and 2/3 of Soviet military vehicles are aided by the United States);
Motorcycles: 35,000 (65,438+0.2 times the total output of the Soviet Union);
Automobile tires: 3.6 million pairs (accounting for 43% of the total output of the Soviet Union);
Natural rubber: 10.35 million tons;
Various chemicals: 630,000 tons;
Locomotive: 1, 98 1 vehicle (2.4 times the total output of the Soviet Union; The railways aided by the Allies accounted for 56.5% of the total railway output of the Soviet Union, and the cars aided were 10.2 times of the total Soviet output);
Tractors: 8,700;
Machine tools: 44,700 sets;
Radio stations: 5,899