BRYAN DONKIN

'Bryan Donkin' (March 22, 1768February 27, 1855) was a British engineer and industrialist.
Born in Sandoe, Northumberland, he served as an apprentice to the papermaker, John Hall, in Dartford, Kent. Donkin was engaged to perfect the papermaking machine devised in 1798 by Nicholas Louis Robert. He developed a commercial application of this Fourdrinier machine and invented the composition roller used in printing.
In 1808 Donkin patented a steel nib pen.
In 1812, Donkin established Britain's first canned-food factory, in Bermondsey . The iron cans were coated with tin and were found to preserve foods such as meat.
By 1847, the Company designed its first products for the emerging gas industry. The name Donkin is a generic name for certain gas valves and Bryan Donkin RMG Gas Controls Limited remains a going concern in Europe
In 1853 Donkin built a full-scale difference engine based on the design of Per Georg Scheutz and his son Edvard. It operated on 15-digit numbers and 4th-order differences, and produced printed output just as Charles Babbage had envisaged.

Contents
See also
Reference
External links

See also



★ ''Men of Science Living in 1807-8''; engraving, 1862 by George Zobel, and William Walker; National Portrait Gallery, London.

Reference



★ ''Chronicle of Britain'' ISBN 1-872031-35-8

★ GIS/V12:2006 Gas Industry Standard Specification for Sealant replacement for valves operating up to and including 2 bar

★ http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9030928/Bryan-Donkin

★ Dictionary of National Biography

External links



Bryan Donkin Chesterfield Foundry

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves