Difference between revisions of "British Thermit"
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
of Speke Road Works, Garston, Liverpool, Chemical and Metallurgical Engineers | |||
1907 Company established | |||
1912 Exhibited carbon free steel alloys at the Non-Ferrous Metals Exhibition at the Royal Agricultural Halls<ref>The Times, 19 June 1912</ref>. | 1912 Exhibited carbon free steel alloys at the Non-Ferrous Metals Exhibition at the Royal Agricultural Halls<ref>The Times, 19 June 1912</ref>. | ||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
1918 of 675, Commercial-road, London E. 14 appointed Mr Cecil Leigh as general manager.<ref>The Engineer 1918/01/03, p 27.</ref> | 1918 of 675, Commercial-road, London E. 14 appointed Mr Cecil Leigh as general manager.<ref>The Engineer 1918/01/03, p 27.</ref> | ||
1922 Manufactured metals and alloys including ferro-alloys of the rarer metals such as tungsten, molybdenum, vanadium, etc. | |||
1937 Alloys and metals. | 1937 Alloys and metals. |
Revision as of 17:30, 29 June 2016
of Speke Road Works, Garston, Liverpool, Chemical and Metallurgical Engineers
1907 Company established
1912 Exhibited carbon free steel alloys at the Non-Ferrous Metals Exhibition at the Royal Agricultural Halls[1].
1917 The British Barimar Thermit Welding Co was given formal sanction with works in Liverpool and London to take up and work under license certain of the patents held by Thermit Ltd now owned by Birmingham Metal and Munitions Co.[2]
1918 of 675, Commercial-road, London E. 14 appointed Mr Cecil Leigh as general manager.[3]
1922 Manufactured metals and alloys including ferro-alloys of the rarer metals such as tungsten, molybdenum, vanadium, etc.
1937 Alloys and metals.