When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Draw plate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Draw_plate

    This must be done because drawing wire hardens it, which causes the wire to become brittle. Brittle wire that has not been annealed may snap during the drawing process (or develop microscopic or macroscopic cracks, which may weaken the piece or "grow" with further working). With a mandrel, a draw plate can be used to draw tubes of metal. Plates ...

  3. Fourcault process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourcault_process

    Fourcault drawing line with detail of the Debiteuse (red) The Fourcault process requires a "pit" or drawing area and an assembly of machines to draw up the ribbon of glass while performing actions upon it that ensure desired quality and process yields. Today most glass manufacture has a "hot end" where the products are made. Fourcault is no ...

  4. Jewelry wire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewelry_wire

    In this process, a solid metal cylinder is pulled through a draw plate with holes of a defined size. Thinner sizes of wire are made by pulling wire through successively smaller holes in the draw plate until the desired size is reached. When wire was first invented, its use was limited to making jewelry.

  5. Wire drawing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wire_drawing

    Wire drawing is a metalworking process used to reduce the cross-section of a wire by pulling the wire through one or more dies. There are many applications for wire drawing, including electrical wiring, cables, tension-loaded structural components, springs, paper clips, spokes for wheels, and stringed musical instruments.

  6. Wire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wire

    The draw-plate or die is a piece of hard cast-iron or hard steel, or for fine work it may be a diamond or a ruby. The object of utilising precious stones is to enable the dies to be used for a considerable period without losing their size, and so producing wire of incorrect diameter.

  7. Charles Bargue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Bargue

    The Charles Bargue Drawing Course is used by many academies and ateliers which focus on Classical Realism. Among the artists whose work is based on the study of Bargue's plate work are Pablo Picasso [1] and Vincent van Gogh, who copied the complete set in 1880/1881, and again in 1890. Bargue was a student of Jean-Léon Gérôme.

  8. Wire gauge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wire_gauge

    In commerce, the sizes of wire are estimated by devices, also called gauges, which consist of plates of circular or oblong form having notches of different widths around their edges to receive wire and sheet metals of different thicknesses. Each notch is stamped with a number, and the wire or sheet, which just fits a given notch, is stated to ...

  9. Nail (fastener) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nail_(fastener)

    Unable to advance through the hole, the broad end is flattened against the nail-header to create a nail-head. In at least some metalworking traditions, nail-headers might have been identical to draw-plates (a plate bored with tapering holes of different sizes through which wire can be drawn to extrude it to increasingly fine proportions). [4]