• Electro Galvanized Wire For Chain Link Fence System 1
  • Electro Galvanized Wire For Chain Link Fence System 2
  • Electro Galvanized Wire For Chain Link Fence System 3
Electro Galvanized Wire For Chain Link Fence

Electro Galvanized Wire For Chain Link Fence

Ref Price:
get latest price
Loading Port:
China Main Port
Payment Terms:
TT OR LC
Min Order Qty:
-
Supply Capability:
-

Add to My Favorites

Follow us:


OKorder Service Pledge

Quality Product, Order Online Tracking, Timely Delivery

OKorder Financial Service

Credit Rating, Credit Services, Credit Purchasing


Quick Details

Place of Origin:
Hebei China (Mainland)
HS Code:721720000Model Number:
Q195
Surface Treatment:
Galvanized
Galvanized Technique:
Hot Dipped Galvanized
Type:
Round Wire
Function:
Binding Wire
Wire Gauge:
5.0mm-0.5mm
Material:
Low carbon steel wire
Zinc coating:
>40g/m2
Tensile Strength:
350N-600N/mm2
Roll weight:
200gram-300kgs/roll
Packing:
plastic inside and woven bag cloth outside


Packaging & Delivery

Packaging Detail:Packing:5kgs-25kgs/roll common,plastic inside and woven bag outside. In 20'ft can load 25tons.
Delivery Detail:depends on amount

Specifications

Hot dipped galvanised iron wire
Hot sell:0.8mm,0.71mm
Zinc coating:>40g
Soft,anti-corrossion
Type:binding wire,wire mesh etc


Hot Dipped Galvanized Iron Wire

Zinc Coating:>40g/m2

Feature:

Hot dipped galvanized wire has great flexibility, high zinc coated, corrosion resisting.

Application of Hot dipped galvanized wire:

Because of the thicker zinc coating, hotdipped galvanized wire has better protective properties, so it is used for harsh working environment,

and it is widely applied in chemical industry, oil processing, marine exploration, metal structure, power transmission, scaffold, bridge, etc.

Electro Galvanized Iron Wire

Zinc Coating:8g-12g/m2

Feature: Electro galvanized wire has great flexibility, through drawing and electric galvanizing,

as one of the binding wires, it is an ideal material for construction and industry.

Application: In weaving of wire mesh, fencing for expressway and construction,

and it also widely supplied in the form of coil wire, spool wire, cut wire, wire tie, binding wire, etc.



Q: Which is live and which is not, there is a black wire and a blue wire?
That's it? A black wire and a blue wire? Hmm...I'd say that they are both hot if you have 240V single phase power. If it's multiphasic, they could be either delta to delta or delta to center tap. Didn't it come with a cord to plug it in? You are also overlooking a bonding screw used for grounding. Look for it, hook it up too. Tell us what the back plate says. (voltage, phases, watts, etc.)
Q: why use a large gauge spark plug wires
What is High Tension Electricity? In all my engineering classes, never heard of it. I wouldn't use large gauge spark plugs unless they were specified. If you use them and they're not specified, you could ruin the spark plugs for too much voltage.
Q: I removed my range hood (switched off the electricity for it first) and there are three wires coming out of the wall. There's a white insulated, black insulated, and totally not insulated copper wire. What is the non-insulated copper wire? When I flip the electricity on, will it have a charge? It was weirdly wrapped around a screw in the box with the wiring...I'm not sure if it was doing anything. Thanks!
The copper wire is for ground. If there's a short, it is supposed to send the electricity into metal that leads into the soil. When you flip the switch, no charge should be in the copper wire... unless there is a short. Screw the weirdly-wrapped screw into something metal. If you have a metal utility box, screw it onto that, and you're range will be safe if there is a short.
Q: Replaced the old fan in my bathroom (about 10 years old) with a new fan. Trouble is this. The fan and light each work on a seperate bathroom switch. I have two spots to install the wire on the new bathroom fan/light. One for the fan and one for the ligth. However, the wiring has one white, one black, one red and the ground. Anyone know what the red is? Can I just cap it off? According the bathroom fan wiring it says something about connecting red to blue. I am slighty confused. I think it was originally only wired between the white and black. I am not sure if I have to get some extra wire and connect the black and red to the light and the white to the fan? Extra wire is confusing.
The wiring for the original installation had the white wire for a common neutral, and one of the red or black wires for the fan and the other for the light. If your new fixture does not have both a fan and a light, simply use either the red or black, and put a wirenut on the unused wire; you will then have one wall switch that does nothing. If it DOES have both, then one non-white wire goes to the fan, the other to the light, and the white wire goes to both.
Q: I need someone's help on wiring my new JVC radio to its harness for a 1991 Chevrolet S10. Please Ty very much.
Chevy S10 Radio Wiring Diagram
Q: Hi,I'm looking to change the outlets and the switch and light fixture in a bedroom of a home built in 1948. The outlets are original to the home I think. Will I have to fish ground wire throught to the panel box for my new receptacles? Or just install new 2 slot outlets?Why the different looking wires?Is the older wire copper with a silver colored coating to indicate being neutral or is this an old aluminum wire? The hot wire is red plastic coated and looks modern to me.
it is normal for a house built in the late 40's --- it was thought, at that time, that the aluminum wiring was cost effective and the most up to date === it would be wise to pull new wire and that would be 12 gauge with a ground [[ two wires, a black
Q: How could you relate greater wire length resulting in greater resistivity to the context of home
Greater wire length will certainly give you a higher resistance. Since heat is measured in watts, and watts (W) =I^2R, where I=Current and R= resistance, then if you double the resistance of a wire (by making it twice as long) you also double the ammount of watts lost in the wire. Since watts equates to heat, this ammount of heat will make the wire hotter. If you use an extension lead, and wind it round a drum, it can get very hot indeed.
Q: im installing an amp and i have no clue what to do with thw power wire.... I read to cut open my steros power wire (usually the blue) and wrap my power wire around it... I found the blue wire but there was a tag... Caution Remote output only... This is not the wire for power supply. please connect this wire to the remote for the amplifier... Does this mean i just connect this wire directly to my amp?
ok wait hold up. so the only wire that should be hooked from the amp to the headunit is your speaker wires, remote turn on wire, and your rca cables. ....What you need to do is get the power cable(usually red) run it from positive on the battery to the POS on your amp. next put your ground wire from the GND on the amp to bare metal on your cars chasis.
Q: What are those strange ball-like things that are on some electric/telephone wires? I think they're on electric wires. I've always wondered.
If they're what I think you're talking about, they are usually orange or red and are used to show aircraft pilots that there is a wire, ... creating a dangerous condition. They usually put these on electrical wires where crop duster airplanes dust fields, or on wires at the end of airport runways. Otherwise the wires would be invisible to the pilot and could cause a crash if hit.
Q: I am wiring a GFCI receptacle with two regular receptacles after it.So before the GFCI I have my 12/2 wire from where it will hook into the box (the line side), after it I have my wire going to the two other receptacles (the load side).Well the GFCI receptacle has screw terminals for the line HOT and WHITE wires as well as a GROUND. On the bottom it has screw terminals for the load side but ONLY the HOT and WHITE, no ground screw.Does this mean that I don't hook up the ground for the load wire or does it mean I have to pigtail the ground to the same screw the line ground is using?I didn't want to assume that I connect the line and load grounds out of fear I was circumventing the GFCI.
Yes, You have to splice the grounds together and then pigtail to the gfci. Hope this helps

Send your message to us

This is not what you are looking for? Post Buying Request

Similar products

Hot products


Hot Searches

Related keywords