Steel
Steel is a comic book character that first appeared in Adventures of Superman #500Originally, Steel mimicked Superman's powers with technology. He built a bullet proof suit of armor whose computerized pneumatic exoskeletal joints gave him super-humanoid strength.
ORIGIN
John Henry Irons is a hero forged from his own making. When Superman saved Irons from a fatal fall off a Metropolis skyscraper, he challenged the construction worker to make his life count for something. A former weapons engineer for the ruthless AmerTek Company, Irons longed to atone for the deaths his designs had caused. For the purpose, he built a suit of exoskeleton armor for himself and assumed the primary alias of Steel. As Steel, he crusaded to dismantle AmerTek's weapons programs, including the destruction of every last production model of the BG-60 "Toastmaster," the deadly assault rifle he had designed. Superman is proud to call Steel his partner. Irons even helped Superman rebuild his Fortress of Solitude and gave it a computer linkage to Irons's headquarters, called " The Steelworks," an abandoned arms factory in Suicide Slums. After the death of Superman by Doomsday, Steel took his place, soaring over Metropolis in high-tech armor and smashing crime with a sledgehammer.
TEAM SUPERMAN
In Superman's absence, or if the Man of Steel needs assistance, Steel often coordinates and leads "Team Superman," a cadre of S-shield-wearing heroes including himself, Supergirl, and Superboy. Steel provided this Super-Squad with stealthy combat-garb meant to protect them from the necrotic touch of Kancer as they aided Superman in battle with General Zod and the armies of Pokolistan.
THE DEATH OF STEEL
Irons suffered mortal wounds releasing Doomsday from the JLA Watchtower to battle Imperiex. Superman was unable to turn away the Black Racer, a being that gathers souls and ushers them into the afterlife. This time,however,the Black Racer delivered Irons to Apokolips, where the evil Darkseid restored life to Iron's body. But the cost at which Steel was brought back to life has still not been determined.
THE DEAL WITH THE DEVIL
Darkseid placed Irons in the Entropy Aegis, a burned out Imperiex-probe altered by Apokoliptic science. This new armor was far superior to his old, but Apokoliptic upgrades made it more of a curse than a blessing.
John Henry Irons's known relatives include a niece, named Natasha Irons, who later became the fourth user of the alias of Steel. The identities of the second and third users of the alias of Steel are not known.
SCREEN STEEL-ER

According to the story of the film, John Henry Irons (O'Neal) was a former first lieutenant in the United States Army, one of whose weapons experts and designers he had been. Susan Sparks suffered paralysis as a direct result of ordnance tests that Irons and Nathaniel Burke were conducting, owing to Burke's sabotage of Irons's project to create weapons that would neutralize soldiers harmlessly, and Irons allowed himself to be mustered out in disgust. Burke became an arms dealer and a crime boss in civilian life, and after seeing gangs using his weapons on the street, Irons joined forces with Sparks using his intellect and the junkyard know-how of his his Uncle Joseph Irons (Richard Roundtree) to forge an exoskeleton power suit, becoming a real man of "steel." Making no effort to duplicate Superman's power to fly in the motion picture, Irons, using the alias of Steel, instead traveled by motorcycle. Moreover, Steel's hammer was primarily an energy rifle. Nor was the existence or non-existence of Superman even discussed in the film, which instead linked Irons to him through a tattoo of Superman's jacket emblem. O'Neal was forced, by dint of his sheer height, to perform all his own stunts; Kenneth Culver Johnson, who directed the film, could not find any stuntmen who could match O'Neal's height.
None of Steel's activities sat well with Burke, who framed Steel for a bank robbery. In reality, hoodlums who reported to Burke had committed the robbery.
Steel's armor was supposed to be made from steel which he had forged himself, but the armor and helmet that O'Neal wore flexed, as if it had been made from painted rubber, throughout the movie.
Steel was not a box-office success.
Steel on television
Steel appears in Superman TAS as an ex Lexcorp employee. He also appears in JLU.
Video game appearances
He appears in the Death and Return of Superman game for Super Nintendo and the Genesis.
A very young John Henry Irons appeared on Justice League the New Frontier
Equipment
Armor
-- Helmet systems include broadband communications array, VDU readouts for environmental controls, and retractable one-way visor.-- Life-support systems which recycle oxygen supply, remove waste, and convert perspiration to potable water.
-- Independent heating and freon-compressed air-conditioning units regulate internal temperatures.
-- Hydraulic servomotors along his exo-skeletal joints increase strength and speed tenfold
-- Air-cooled cannons in his forearms gauntlet fire metal spikes and rubber projectiles. They function as the launching platform for concussive sonic grenades.
-- Segmented breakaway boots that can be jettisoned if neccesary.
-- Micro-jet engine compressors controlled by Pressure sensitive toggles in his gloves.
-- Thrusters proved a wide range of airborne maneuverability.
-- Armor is composed of breathable fire-retardant Nomex fabric.
-- Embedded solar cells help keep his armor fully charged.
-- His suit is made of a compostie high-tensile steel alloy treated with micron-thick reflective sealant to shield against microwave and subatomic particle radiation.
Hammer
-- Remote-controlled-- Can alter trajectory or stop mid-throw
-- Polarizing inertial dampers within hammer increase inertia relative to distance hurled
-- Magnetically attaches to back of armor.
-- Segmented handle telescopes into locked position.
| Super Name: | Steel |
| Real Name: | John Henry Irons |
| Aliases: |
John Henry Irons The Man Of Steel |
| Publisher: | DC Comics |
| Gender: | Male |
| Character Type: | Human |
| 1st Appearance: | Adventures of Superman #500 |
| Appears in: | 302 issues |
| Birthday: | |
| Died: |
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Justice League : The New Frontier
Adaption of the acclaimed graphic novel
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Steel
NBA superstar O'Neal slam-dunks his way onto the silver screen. (Well Sort of) Shaq brings the hammer of Justice life as One of DC comics ...
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