HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Brown Bayley Steels was a steel-making company established in
Sheffield Sheffield is a city status in the United Kingdom, city in South Yorkshire, England, whose name derives from the River Sheaf which runs through it. The city serves as the administrative centre of the City of Sheffield. It is Historic counties o ...
,
England England is a country that is part of the United Kingdom. It shares land borders with Wales to its west and Scotland to its north. The Irish Sea lies northwest and the Celtic Sea to the southwest. It is separated from continental Europe b ...
in 1871, as Brown, Bayley & Dixon. They occupied a site on Leeds Road which was later occupied by the Don Valley sports stadium. The firm was founded by George Brown, Nephew of "John Brown" of the firm
John Brown & Company John Brown and Company of Clydebank was a Scottish Naval architecture, marine engineering and shipbuilding firm. It built many notable and world-famous ships including , , , , , and the ''Queen Elizabeth 2 (ship), Queen Elizabeth 2''. At its ...
. The firm manufactured
Bessemer steel The Bessemer process was the first inexpensive industrial process for the mass production of steel from molten pig iron before the development of the open hearth furnace. The key principle is steelmaking, removal of impurities from the iron by ox ...
and
railway tracks A railway track (British English and International Union of Railways, UIC terminology) or railroad track (American English), also known as permanent way or simply track, is the structure on a Rail transport, railway or railroad consisting of ...
.A Photographic History of Sheffield Steel,by Geoffrey Howse, published by WH Smith, Notable among its employees was
Harry Brearley Harry Brearley (18 February 1871 – 14 July 1948) was an English metallurgist, credited with the invention of "rustless steel" (later to be called "stainless steel" in the anglophone world). Based in Sheffield, his invention brought affordabl ...
, the inventor of
stainless steel Stainless steel is an alloy of iron that is resistant to rusting and corrosion. It contains at least 11% chromium and may contain elements such as carbon, other nonmetals and metals to obtain other desired properties. Stainless steel's corros ...
. Brearley left
Firths Firth is a word in the English and Scots languages used to denote various coastal waters in the United Kingdom, predominantly within Scotland. In the Northern Isles, it more usually refers to a smaller inlet. It is linguistically cognate to ''fj ...
after a dispute over the patents and was offered a position at Brown Bayley, where he was appointed works manager and then became a director.


The Brown Bayley steelworks,

The company occupied a site. "View of a 1950s Engineering Apprentice";


The melting shop

Scrap steel loaded by overhead cranes using electromagnetic grabs fed the Siemens Martin
Open hearth furnace An open-hearth furnace or open hearth furnace is any of several kinds of industrial furnace in which excess carbon and other impurities are burnt out of pig iron to produce steel. Because steel is difficult to manufacture owing to its high melt ...
s via charging machines tipping “coffin”-like loading containers directly into the furnaces. The furnaces were heated by water gas and producer gas made on site fed to the furnaces by gas mains. The molten metal had alloys added, then sampled and after satisfactory laboratory checks of the metal composition the furnaces were tapped out into preheated bottom pouring ladles holding some 20 tons. The ladles were manoeuvred by
overhead crane An overhead crane, commonly called a bridge crane, is a type of crane found in industrial environments. An overhead crane consists of two parallel rails seated on longitudinal I-beams attached to opposite steel columns by means of brackets. ...
into the casting bays over several ceramic runner systems each feeding six preheated one-ton ingot moulds. After cooling the ingot moulds were stripped of the still hot ingots and taken to the ingot yard. In the 1950s the transport from the Open Hearth Casting Bays to the ingot yard was by steam lorry, or on the internal steam
railway Rail transport (also known as train transport) is a means of transport that transfers passengers and goods on wheeled vehicles running on rails, which are incorporated in tracks. In contrast to road transport, where the vehicles run on a pre ...
system. As of 2016, a fully restored original example of one of the steam lorries carrying the Brown Bayley livery can be found at the
Riverside Museum The Riverside Museum (formerly known as the Glasgow Museum of Transport) is a museum in Glasgow, housed in a building at Pointhouse Quay in the Glasgow Harbour regeneration district of Glasgow, Scotland. The building opened in June 2011, winnin ...
in
Glasgow Glasgow ( ; sco, Glesca or ; gd, Glaschu ) is the most populous city in Scotland and the fourth-most populous city in the United Kingdom, as well as being the 27th largest city by population in Europe. In 2020, it had an estimated popul ...
. After cooling and weathering selected ingots would be transported to the machine shop where they were placed on ingot planning machines to remove the outer-scaled surface and allow examination for cracks and impurities. Impurities were gouged out with chisels using pneumatic “chipping hammers” or by manually operated swing frame grinding. Electromagnets carried ingots to the skid pusher behind the reheat furnaces of No.1 Mill. These furnaces were again heated by on site-produced raw
coal gas Coal gas is a flammable gaseous fuel made from coal and supplied to the user via a piped distribution system. It is produced when coal is heated strongly in the absence of air. Town gas is a more general term referring to manufactured gaseous ...
.


No1 Mill

No1 Mill was a reversing cogging mill driven by a several hundred horsepower electric motor through a
Krupp The Krupp family (see pronunciation), a prominent 400-year-old German dynasty from Essen, is notable for its production of steel, artillery, ammunition and other armaments. The family business, known as Friedrich Krupp AG (Friedrich Krup ...
gearbox. The cogging stand reduced the section ingot to either slab or bar of section. All hot material was moved at ground level on live roller paths. The second and third stands reduced material to either square or round bar of section, or plate of section. The first stand had a
hydraulic Hydraulics (from Greek: Υδραυλική) is a technology and applied science using engineering, chemistry, and other sciences involving the mechanical properties and use of liquids. At a very basic level, hydraulics is the liquid counter ...
manipulator, which turned the material for rolling and also aligned it with a hydraulic accumulator driven hot shear, which cut off the red-hot ingot runner head of section in 3 seconds. The manipulator then aligning the ingot with the reducing rolls making several passes to make the required section. After rolling to the ordered section the red hot steel ran along ground level live roller paths to the hot saws or hot shears. The hot saws had a carbon steel saw blade similar to a woodworkers
circular saw A circular saw is a power-saw using a toothed or abrasive disc or blade to cut different materials using a rotary motion spinning around an arbor. A hole saw and ring saw also use a rotary motion but are different from a circular saw. ''Cir ...
, but running with a constant cooling water spray to the teeth. These hot saws were capable of slicing through bar in seconds with showers of sparks and the screaming metal emitting a noise of 110 decibels. Hot shears also cropped the bar to length, but left indentations in the end of the bars, where hot sawing left a straight, clean cut. The bars were then lowered into cooling pits before being taken to heat treatment and bar-straightening machines. Round bar straightening was done in machines known then as “Reelers” with a convex and concave roller paired together at an angle, the action of which both straightened and fed the bar whilst passing it through the machine. Again the entry chute to the machine was a lidded box built to contain the flailing bent bars which emitted a very loud rattling noise.


Special steels

Electric arc furnace An electric arc furnace (EAF) is a furnace that heats material by means of an electric arc. Industrial arc furnaces range in size from small units of approximately one-tonne capacity (used in foundries for producing cast iron products) up to ab ...
s also produced steels using scrap from “T’Top Bank” many tons of armaments arrived at the Top Bank for melting down Oerlikon and other anti aircraft guns arriving by rail for destruction into steel for peaceful use. Two high-frequency electric furnaces produced one-ton melts of special steels in an area close to the main electric arc furnaces.


No6 Mill

No6 Mill was a three-high rolling mill with several stands (Sets of Rolls) producing bar down to thick wire sizes from red hot billets taken from the reheat furnaces. The small diameter rod and bar produced in this mill snaked all over the cast iron floor plates. The operators used tongs to catch hold of the end of the red hot bar as it left the rolls, passed the bar around their body allowing it to loop out onto the floor and then entered the bar into the next pass position. In one hot summer the floor plates expanded, the expansion could not go anywhere and two plates buckled upwards like flagstones directing the hot metal into the air – within milliseconds there was no one on the mill floor as the metal reared up towards the roof and collapsed in a writhing heap as the mill rollers continued to spew out the rest of the bar.


The works


Leeds Road

*Spring Shop *Hammer Shop *Ring rolling shop Telpher Crane *Axles- railway *Axle and railway tyre drop test *Heat Treatment Department *Creep Laboratories *Tyre Blank Press *Machine shop axles tyres *Blacksmiths Shop *Loco Shed *Drawing Office *Generator converter house DC for Cranes


East Works

*Sheet Rolling Mill *Sheet pickling plant *Sheet Polishing and guillotine Shops *Stekel Mills - slitting machines


Bright Bar Shop

*Bar Drawing *Centre-less Turning Machines *Centre-less Lidkoping Grinding Machines *5 Ton hammer *500 Ton press *Railway tyre rolling mill


See also

*
List of companies in Sheffield The following companies are either headquartered or have significant bases in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England. Sheffield-based For former companies, see navigation box at the bottom of page. * A.L. Simpkin & Co. Ltd - confectionery producer ...
*
Kelham Island Museum The Kelham Island Museum is an industrial museum on Alma Street, alongside the River Don, in the centre of Sheffield, England. It was opened in 1982. The site The island on which it is located is man-made, resulting from the construction of a ...
has a vast archives of information available for researchers and public displays from the history of Sheffield steel, with artefacts from old steel works. A lot of the local history books use material from their collection of photographs.


References


External links


Kelham Island Museum
{{Sheffield companies Ironworks and steelworks in England Manufacturing companies based in Sheffield Defunct companies based in Sheffield Steel companies of the United Kingdom