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  2. Number 8 wire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Number_8_wire

    From the early 1960s, high-tensile 12½ gauge (2.5 mm) steel wire has largely replaced number 8 wire for New Zealand fencing, as it is lighter and cheaper, though also more difficult to work. [4] Since 1976, when New Zealand adopted the metric system , number 8 wire is officially referred to as 4.0 mm gauge wire, although the older term "Number ...

  3. Agricultural fencing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agricultural_fencing

    High tensile (H-T or HT) fencing is a special hard, springy steel wire [6] that was introduced in the 1970s and has slowly gained acceptance. The wire may be a single strand plain or barbed wire, or woven mesh, and is capable of much higher tension than mild steel.

  4. Electric fence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_fence

    Smooth steel wire is the material most often used for electric fences, ranging from a fine thin wire used as a single line to thicker, high-tensile (HT) wire. Less often, woven wire or barbed wire fences can be electrified, though such practices create a more hazardous fence, particularly if an animal becomes caught by the fencing material ...

  5. Barbed wire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbed_wire

    High-tensile wire is made with thinner but higher-strength steel. Its greater strength makes fences longer lasting because it resists stretching and loosening better, coping with expansion and contraction caused by heat and animal pressure by stretching and relaxing within wider elastic limits.

  6. Western Union splice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_union_splice

    The 1915 textbook Practical Electric Wiring describes the construction of the Western Union splice; short tie and long tie. The short tie splice has it being formed after stripping the insulation from a pair of wires for several inches, each, crossing the wires left over right as shown in figure part A; then, a hooked cross (figure part B) is formed holding the crossing point of the two wires ...

  7. Razor wire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Razor_wire

    Barbed tape on a fence. Razor wire has a central strand of high tensile strength wire, and a steel tape punched into a shape with barbs. The steel tape is then cold-crimped tightly to the wire everywhere except for the barbs. Flat barbed tape is very similar, but has no central reinforcement wire.