• electric galvanized iron wire for binding System 1
electric galvanized iron wire for binding

electric galvanized iron wire for binding

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Loading Port:
Tianjin
Payment Terms:
TT OR LC
Min Order Qty:
5 m.t.
Supply Capability:
500 m.t./month

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We can supply super quality Electro Galvanized Iron Wire/ Hot Dipped Galvanized Wire processed with low/hign carbon steel wire, through drawing and electro

galvanizing.Our Fivestar produces Galvanized Wire from choiced low/high carbon steel wire, through the strict process of wire drawing-annealing-acid washing-water clearing-drying-galvanizing

 coiling, in this way, excellent flexibility and tensile strength could be guaranteed.

 

Electro/Hot Dipped Galvanized Wire Technical/Mechanical Characters:
ASTM Standard: A641/A641M-98
Material: SAE1006/1008,Q195/235 SAE1050/1065

Standard wire gauge BWG6 to BWG25.
Zinc coating: 8-25g/sqm for Electro Galvanized Wire; 60g - 220g/sqm for Hot Dipped Galvanized Wire
Heavy coating: >200grams/sq.m or according to our customers' requirement >250grams/sq.m
T.S.: 300/550Mpa, 350/450Mpa, 450-550Mpa, 600-800Mpa, 700-900Mpa 1100-1300Mpa, 1300-1700Mpa etc.
Packing: 1kg-1000kgs/coil

Application: This kind of wire is extensively used in construction, handicrafts, woven wire mesh, express way fencing mesh, packaging of products and other daily uses.


Q: i got this switch with numbers 1 , 2, 3, and 4 on it and 4 wires red, green, and two black. Which wires go to which number?
Well it is defintely a 3 way switch. The fourth (green) wire being the ground. I can't tell you by the numbers, but I can tell you by the screws which wire goes where. If it does not apply to your switch you may need to go get a new one. They are inexpensive. The green, ground wire goes to the screw that is usually attached to the arms ( metal extentions that hold against the sheet rock. Now you need to find the red and black wire that are together. Look inside the box where the wires come in and you should be able to tell if the red and black are in the same sheathing. These are your travelers. The travelers need to go on the two screws that are across from eachother. One goes on the right side and one goes on the left. Does not matter which side. The last black wire, depending on which of the two 3 ways you are at is either your power or your light leg (wire going to your light). This wire goes on the last screw. Hope this was helpful.
Q: im confused which wires are what, theres two wires...no colors?
I need to know is the wires silver brass colors the silver should be the hot wire .If you live in the states call me at mike'sdiy 301-784-6227 ill walk you through it step by step.
Q: where does the thin blue wire from the amp go, i know it goes to the stereo but i dont know to what wire
hook it up to ur little blue wire that says power antenna if not on there find somewhere on ur fuse panel that turns off and on when u turn on the key or wire it to toggle switch and then to the hot wire on the amp and u can turn the amp on and off anytime u like
Q: A wire has resistance 56.8 ohms. If another wire consists of the same material but has twice the length and half the diameter of the first, what is the resistance of the 2nd wire?
The resistance of a wire is given by R = rho*L/A, L is length, A is cross-sectional area, and rho is resistivity, which is dependent on material. It will be constant here as we are dealing with the same material. Let's say that the radius of the first wire is r1. R1 = rho*L1/A1 = rho*L1/(pi*r1^2) rho = R1*A1/L1 = R1*pi*r1^2/L1 For the second wire, R2 = rho*L2/A2 = L2/(pi*r2^2) * R1*Pi*r1^2/L1 L2 is twice L1, L2=2*L1. The diameter is half the first, which means that the radius of half the first, so r2 = r1/2. R2 = 2*L1/(pi*(r1/2)^2) * R1*pi*r1^2/L1 = 8*R1 = 454 ohms.
Q: What silk is fine as hair, soft as wool, strong as steel?
Steel wire can be processed to fine hair, of course, such as steel wire, but it can not be soft as wool (of course, very thin strands of steel are also very soft).
Q: Hi,I'm trying to install a ceiling light with a 3 wire configuration (white, black, ground) into a wire configuration of 4 wires (white, red, black, ground). This is configured for two on/off switches.So far, I have white to white, black to black, and ground to ground with the red capped off. This works with one switch perfectly, however when I hit the other switch, the circuit breaker blows.Please help, and thank you!
I think according to your description of the wire configuration what you have is a power supply at the switches and 2 lead wires (red and black) coming up to power the light and fan separately. The white wire, or neutral wire is for a return path while the ground wire is a backup in the event the neutral fails.At the switch in the wall, you should note a black wire (power source) coming to the bottom terminal of any switches. From there, you will find another black or red wire going to the light itself. The neutral wires are all connected together and tucked away in the switch box. If the 4 wire configuration is from the fixture itself, then you would have a black wire for power to the light, a red wire for power to the fan unit while the white is a neutral return. If there is only one wall switch, you could in theory, connect the black and red from the fixture to the power supply coming up from the switch and therefore use the pull chains located on the fixture to turn on the light or fan or both. Failing this, it would be best to call a qualified electrician and protect yourself from what could be a nasty fire. Good Luck.
Q: Just took off the starter on a cavalier and forgot to label the wires. Can someone please send me a diagram of where all these wires go, or just tell me where they go. there are big post and one small one. Please help asap. Thanks.
all wiring with large eyelet end,s go to main solenoid terminal...the large brass/copper post in the center/top. the small wire/wire,s attach to the terminal marked with a S for solenoid. the small terminal to the side. do not place any ground wire,s to either terminal....best of luck.
Q: How can u do a wire transfer? Is there anything extra that is needed to do this? Are you able to make a wire transfer from your home computer?
Most people go to the bank and arrange for wire transfer from there. You will need to have the funds to wire, the account where you want it transfered to. it is possible, but it would have to be prearranged.
Q: I got the Rem wire down connected it to cd deck.But what does Rem stand for and what does it do?Remote Wire? what the hell it do where it run off?
The blue and white wire on the back of car stereos is not a remote wire, it is the antenna wire for power antennas. Which does not require 12 volts to power on the antenna motor. The remote wire is the same thing as the REM wire, REM is short for remote. This wire is used to send a 12 volt signal to external amplifiers to turn them on when the stereo is turned on.
Q: My dad is trying to wire a electric cook top...it has three wires (black, red, and copper). His junction box has four wires (black, red, white and copper). He first wired the black to black, red to red and copper to copper, he capped the white wire in the junction box. The cook top did not work. Then he connected the white wire with the two copper wires, and the cook top now works. So the question is will this connection work or will it cause a problem? And if it causes a problem what can he do to resolve it?
Hi There, This what I would do. The black and red wires from the cooktop are fine and can be connected to the black and red wires in the junction box. Check the copper wire from the stove and see where it is connected. It is probably a neutral wire used to supply 120 volts for a clock, lights or other control function. If that is the case I would exchange it for a properly sized insulated white wire. This white wire can be connected to the white wire in the junction box. Then: Connect the copper wire to a metal part of the cooktop to use as a ground wire. This wire can then be connected to the copper wire in the junction box. This would be a typical modern 4-wire 240 volt setup. Hope this helps, Al

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