About This Book
The essay recounts the mid-19th-century transformation of steelmaking from slow cementation and crucible methods to an air-blast converter that decarburizes molten pig iron by blowing cold air and then restores controlled carbon with manganiferous additions. It reconstructs contemporary technical debates about priority and practical contributions, weighing claims by inventors who asserted antecedent air-boiling methods and by metallurgists who developed manganese treatment, and situates the controversy in press discussion and patent disputes. The author re-evaluates chronologies and credit, arguing that while one inventor profited commercially, several figures played distinct roles in making the process practical and widely adopted.
About the Author
You May Also Like
6 picks
"Puffing Billy" and the Prize "Rocket" / or, the story of the Stephensons and our Railways.
by Helen C. Knight
40 years / 40 años / 40 ans
by Marie Lebert
A boy's text book on gas engines
by Fay Leone Faurote
A Catechism of the Steam Engine
by C. E. John Bourne
A Course In Wood Turning
by Archie Seldon Milton
A few secrets of the metallurgist simply told
by Gerald Watson Hinkley