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Wire
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== Production == {{Main|Wire drawing}} [[File:Wiredrawing.svg|thumb|left|Wire drawing concept]] [[File:RG-59.jpg|thumb|[[Coaxial cable]], one example of a jacketed and insulated wire]] Wire is often reduced to the desired diameter and properties by repeated [[wire drawing|drawing]] through progressively smaller dies, or traditionally holes in [[draw plate]]s. After a number of passes the wire may be [[annealing (metallurgy)|annealed]] to facilitate more drawing or, if it is a finished product, to maximise ductility and [[electrical conductivity|conductivity]]. [[Electrical wire]]s are usually covered with [[insulation (electric)|insulating materials]], such as plastic, rubber-like polymers, or varnish. Insulating and jacketing of wires and cables is nowadays done by passing them through an extruder. Formerly, materials used for insulation included treated cloth or paper and various oil-based products. Since the mid-1960s, plastic and [[polymer]]s exhibiting properties similar to rubber have predominated. Two or more wires may be wrapped concentrically, separated by insulation, to form [[coaxial cable]]. The wire or cable may be further protected with substances like [[Paraffin wax|paraffin]], some kind of preservative compound, bitumen, [[lead]], aluminum sheathing, or steel taping. Stranding or covering machines wind material onto wire which passes through quickly. Some of the smallest machines for cotton covering have a large drum, which grips the wire and moves it through toothed gears; the wire passes through the centre of disks mounted above a long bed, and the disks carry each a number of [[bobbin]]s varying from six to twelve or more in different machines. A supply of covering material is wound on each bobbin, and the end is led on to the wire, which occupies a central position relatively to the bobbins; the latter being revolved at a suitable speed bodily with their disks, the cotton is consequently served on to the wire, winding in spiral fashion so as to overlap. If many strands are required the disks are duplicated, so that as many as sixty spools may be carried, the second set of strands being laid over the first.<ref name="EB1911"/> For heavier cables that are used for [[electric light]] and power as well as submarine cables, the machines are somewhat different in construction. The wire is still carried through a hollow shaft, but the bobbins or spools of covering material are set with their spindles at right angles to the axis of the wire, and they lie in a circular cage which rotates on rollers below. The various strands coming from the spools at various parts of the circumference of the cage all lead to a disk at the end of the hollow shaft. This disk has perforations through which each of the strands pass, thence being immediately wrapped on the cable, which slides through a bearing at this point. Toothed gears having certain definite ratios are used to cause the winding drum for the cable and the cage for the spools to rotate at suitable relative speeds which do not vary. The cages are multiplied for stranding with many tapes or strands, so that a machine may have six bobbins on one cage and twelve on the other.<ref name="EB1911"/>
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