British Iron and Steel Research Association
The British Iron and Steel Research Association or BISRA, formed in 1944, was the research arm of the British steel industry. It had headquarters in London, originally at 11 Park Lane, later moved to 24 Buckingham Gate, with Laboratories in Sheffield on Hoyle Street, Swansea, Teesside, and Battersea. The organization was created by Sir Charles Goodeve, who remained its director until his retirement in 1969. Roger Eddison was hired as a manager shortly after BISRA's founding. BISRA's research has been responsible for much of the automation of modern steelmaking. BISRA were pioneers of digital computing in the steel industry.BISRA was funded 15% by a grant from the government of the United Kingdom, and 85% by a cooperative of several steelmaking companies. Provided by Wikipedia
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1Book
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3BookPublished 1964“…British Iron and Steel Research Association. Steel User Section…”
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4BookPublished 1969“…British Iron and Steel Research Association…”
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5BookPublished 1964“…British Iron and Steel Research Association…”
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6BookPublished 1967“…British Iron and Steel Research Association…”
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7BookPublished 1967“…British Iron and Steel Research Association…”
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8BookPublished 1967“…British Iron and Steel Research Association. Plant Engineering and Energy Division…”
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9BookPublished 1971“…British Iron and Steel Research Association. Chemical Analysis Committee…”
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10BookPublished 1958“…British Iron and Steel Research Association. Ingot Surface Defects Sub-Committee. Steelmaking…”
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11Conference Proceeding BookPublished 1969“…British Iron and Steel Research Association…”
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12Conference Proceeding BookPublished 1970“…British Iron and Steel Research Association…”