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  2. Wire rope spooling technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wire_rope_spooling_technology

    Cross winding is reduced to approximately 20% of the circumference of the drum, and 80% remains parallel to the flanges in the inner layer rope groove. This parallel grooving evenly distributes the load between the individual layers and has been shown to increase substantially – by more than 500%, tests have shown – the life of the wire rope.

  3. Groove (engineering) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Groove_(engineering)

    In manufacturing or mechanical engineering a groove is a long and narrow indentation built into a material, generally for the purpose of allowing another material or part to move within the groove and be guided by it.

  4. Wire rope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wire_rope

    Steel wire rope (right hand lang lay) Wire rope is composed of as few as two solid, metal wires twisted into a helix that forms a composite rope, in a pattern known as laid rope. Larger diameter wire rope consists of multiple strands of such laid rope in a pattern known as cable laid. Manufactured using an industrial machine known as a strander ...

  5. Worm, parcel and serve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worm,_parcel_and_serve

    "Worming" the line is designed to fill in the channels (the contlines) between the strands in order to keep water out and to allow tighter, smoother wrapping of the next layers by giving the rope a more cylindrical shape. Lengths of "small stuff" or string are led along the lay of the rope between the strands, following the twist so that they ...

  6. Ropework - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ropework

    However, the rope and knotting expert Geoffrey Budworth warns against the practice of fusing thus: [2] Sealing rope ends this way is lazy and dangerous. A tugboat operator once sliced the palm of his hand open down to the sinews after the hardened (and obviously sharp) end of a rope that had been heat-sealed pulled through his grasp. There is ...

  7. Eye splice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eye_splice

    The eye splice is a method of creating a permanent loop (an "eye") in the end of a rope by means of rope splicing. The Flemish eye is a type of circular loop at the end of a thread. There are several techniques of creating the eye with its knot tied back to the line, rope or wire.

  8. Rope splicing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rope_splicing

    Rope splicing in ropework is the forming of a semi-permanent joint between two ropes or two parts of the same rope by partly untwisting and then interweaving their strands. Splices can be used to form a stopper at the end of a line, to form a loop or an eye in a rope, or for joining two ropes together. [ 1 ]

  9. Spiral groove bearing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiral_groove_bearing

    The symmetric herringbone pattern has zero flow which reduces the possibility of entraining dirt into the bearing, but spiral groove journal bearings are also found with a single pattern that produces a through flow of lubricant. This feature has been used to produce a known volume of flow for constant-flow diesel-pump metering systems.