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Eli the Bearded May 6th 14 07:33 PM

straightening wire
 
Is there an easy way to take wire off a spool and get it straight?
I'm working with 12ga galvinized steel here, in lengths of about
two feet.

I know the jewelry people use nylon tipped pliers (squeeze tight
and pull through, repeat as needed), which seems fine for very small
soft wire, but I don't think that's going to work on this heavy stuff.

Elijah
------
has been trying to bend it straight by hand

David Billington May 6th 14 07:38 PM

straightening wire
 
On 06/05/14 19:33, Eli the Bearded wrote:
Is there an easy way to take wire off a spool and get it straight?
I'm working with 12ga galvinized steel here, in lengths of about
two feet.

I know the jewelry people use nylon tipped pliers (squeeze tight
and pull through, repeat as needed), which seems fine for very small
soft wire, but I don't think that's going to work on this heavy stuff.

Elijah
------
has been trying to bend it straight by hand

I straighten MIG wire for TIG welding using lock wire pliers to twist
the wire, one end held in a vice and the other in the lock wire pliers,
works very well. Not sure about 12g but then you can always do the same
thing with an electric drill. Hopefully the galvanising won't have issue
with the twist but easy enough to try and find out.

Jon Elson[_3_] May 6th 14 07:47 PM

straightening wire
 
Eli the Bearded wrote:

Is there an easy way to take wire off a spool and get it straight?
I'm working with 12ga galvinized steel here, in lengths of about
two feet.

I know the jewelry people use nylon tipped pliers (squeeze tight
and pull through, repeat as needed), which seems fine for very small
soft wire, but I don't think that's going to work on this heavy stuff.

My trick is to put it between two 2x4's and roll the wire between them.
This gets them pretty straight. If you have a lot of this to do, you
can build a wire straightener with pegs or rollers made from cheap
ball bearings. You bend it first against the original curve, then
back the other way, but less bend, then back the first way, again
less bend. You can pull many feet through the straightener at one time,
then cut to she shorter lengths. I think they actually make commercial
machines that do this, so you may be able to see photos of how they
work.

Jon

Gunner Asch[_6_] May 6th 14 08:47 PM

straightening wire
 
On Tue, 6 May 2014 18:33:29 +0000 (UTC), Eli the Bearded
wrote:

Is there an easy way to take wire off a spool and get it straight?
I'm working with 12ga galvinized steel here, in lengths of about
two feet.

I know the jewelry people use nylon tipped pliers (squeeze tight
and pull through, repeat as needed), which seems fine for very small
soft wire, but I don't think that's going to work on this heavy stuff.

Elijah
------
has been trying to bend it straight by hand



http://www.witels-albert-usa.com/str...ide_rolls.html

http://wirestraightener.com/guide-rolls

http://www.kempler.com/sub_category.cfm/category/Wire%20Machinery/category1/Wire%20Straightening%20and%20Cutting%20Machine.htm ?srccd=Adwords%205630382862--wire%20straightener&gclid=CMHFhciHmL4CFU5afgodgjIA UA

https://www.google.com/search?q=wire+straightening+tool&safe=off&client=f irefox-a&hs=fd7&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=Hjt pU7TGG4fzoATS54HwCA&ved=0CFYQ7Ak&biw=1280&bih=871& dpr=1

Many shops use coiled wire stock...particularly swiss machine and cold
heading shops. There is a ton of that stuff out there for very little
money as hundreds of those shops have gone tits up.


--

"
I was once told by a “gun safety” advocate back in the Nineties
that he favored total civilian firearms confiscation.
Only the military and police should have weapons he averred and what did I think about that?

I began to give him a reasoned answer and he
cut me off with an abrupt, “Give me the short answer.”

I thought for a moment and said, “If you try to take our firearms we will kill you.”"

Tim Wescott[_5_] May 6th 14 10:04 PM

straightening wire
 
On Tue, 06 May 2014 13:47:28 -0500, Jon Elson wrote:

Eli the Bearded wrote:

Is there an easy way to take wire off a spool and get it straight? I'm
working with 12ga galvinized steel here, in lengths of about two feet.

I know the jewelry people use nylon tipped pliers (squeeze tight and
pull through, repeat as needed), which seems fine for very small soft
wire, but I don't think that's going to work on this heavy stuff.

My trick is to put it between two 2x4's and roll the wire between them.
This gets them pretty straight. If you have a lot of this to do, you
can build a wire straightener with pegs or rollers made from cheap ball
bearings. You bend it first against the original curve, then back the
other way, but less bend, then back the first way, again less bend. You
can pull many feet through the straightener at one time,
then cut to she shorter lengths. I think they actually make commercial
machines that do this, so you may be able to see photos of how they
work.


That's my understanding of how they work. A friend of my dad's owned a
freelance tool and die shop (Pofco, in Clackamas): I remember once when
he was building just such a tool, as part of a larger production line for
something built out of wire.

I suspect they need to be fiddled with to get the wire perfectly straight.

As an alternative, if you take a piece of bent up wire and you pull on it
hard enough that it yields a bit all along its length, it'll be straight
when you're done. I've used this in the past to straighten copper wire
and I can attest to it working like a charm. I haven't had occasion to
try it on anything harder.

--

Tim Wescott
Wescott Design Services
http://www.wescottdesign.com


Steve W.[_4_] May 6th 14 10:13 PM

straightening wire
 
Eli the Bearded wrote:
Is there an easy way to take wire off a spool and get it straight?
I'm working with 12ga galvinized steel here, in lengths of about
two feet.

I know the jewelry people use nylon tipped pliers (squeeze tight
and pull through, repeat as needed), which seems fine for very small
soft wire, but I don't think that's going to work on this heavy stuff.

Elijah
------
has been trying to bend it straight by hand


Take a heavy slide hammer, lock the wire in it and the other end in a
vice. Pull it tight then hit the weight hard a couple times. The shock
will stretch the wire just enough to straighten it. If you don't have a
slide hammer use a chunk of weight with a hole in the middle, slide the
wire into the hole, clamp a pair of vice grips on the end and hit the
weight against the vice grips.


--
Steve W.

Paul K. Dickman May 6th 14 10:23 PM

straightening wire
 

"Eli the Bearded" wrote in message
...
Is there an easy way to take wire off a spool and get it straight?
I'm working with 12ga galvinized steel here, in lengths of about
two feet.

I know the jewelry people use nylon tipped pliers (squeeze tight
and pull through, repeat as needed), which seems fine for very small
soft wire, but I don't think that's going to work on this heavy stuff.

Elijah
------
has been trying to bend it straight by hand


Some time back, an RCMer from the golden years wrote this about this very
subject.

We routinely straighten music wire of all diameters at work. We use it
for hinge pins on aircraft. Our music wire comes in large rolls. The
way we do it, is to take a piece of tubing and bend it in sort of a
relaxed z shape as below.

---------\
\
\-------------

Clamp this in a vise. Cut the wire to length, and insert one end into
an air or electric drill. Insert the other end into the opening of
the bent tube, and turn on drill, and force wire through the bent
tube. Once its through a bit on the other end, then place the ch=uck
on this end, and then just run drill and pull the wire through the
bent tube.. Push it back and forth a few times, and when it comes out
it will be straight. A little oil may make it easier. We have
straightened music wire up to .185 this way.
foxeye



It works pretty well.



Paul K. Dickman



Tom Gardner[_6_] May 7th 14 06:35 AM

straightening wire
 
On 5/6/2014 2:33 PM, Eli the Bearded wrote:
Is there an easy way to take wire off a spool and get it straight?
I'm working with 12ga galvinized steel here, in lengths of about
two feet.

I know the jewelry people use nylon tipped pliers (squeeze tight
and pull through, repeat as needed), which seems fine for very small
soft wire, but I don't think that's going to work on this heavy stuff.

Elijah
------
has been trying to bend it straight by hand


A Pyramid Straightener consists of at least 3 wheels per plane of wire
to be straightened. one of the wheels is adjustable, often many groups
of three wheels on many planes are used.
http://www.durantco.com/wire-straighteners.php




Karl Townsend May 7th 14 12:56 PM

straightening wire
 

A Pyramid Straightener consists of at least 3 wheels per plane of wire
to be straightened. one of the wheels is adjustable, often many groups
of three wheels on many planes are used.
http://www.durantco.com/wire-straighteners.php



Do you have any expereince with wire? :)

karl


Larry Jaques[_4_] May 7th 14 01:10 PM

straightening wire
 
On Wed, 07 May 2014 01:35:46 -0400, Tom Gardner Mars@Tacks wrote:

On 5/6/2014 2:33 PM, Eli the Bearded wrote:
Is there an easy way to take wire off a spool and get it straight?
I'm working with 12ga galvinized steel here, in lengths of about
two feet.

I know the jewelry people use nylon tipped pliers (squeeze tight
and pull through, repeat as needed), which seems fine for very small
soft wire, but I don't think that's going to work on this heavy stuff.

Elijah
------
has been trying to bend it straight by hand


A Pyramid Straightener consists of at least 3 wheels per plane of wire
to be straightened. one of the wheels is adjustable, often many groups
of three wheels on many planes are used.
http://www.durantco.com/wire-straighteners.php


Now tell us how you perm your wire brushes, too, sweetie!

--
If government were a product,
selling it would be illegal.
--P.J. O'Rourke

Cydrome Leader May 7th 14 04:27 PM

straightening wire
 
Eli the Bearded wrote:
Is there an easy way to take wire off a spool and get it straight?
I'm working with 12ga galvinized steel here, in lengths of about
two feet.


I just pull wire between clamped down or stepped on wooden blocks.
Sometimes pulling the wire out from between them at an angle helps, even
though you can then get a gentle curl in the wire.

Basically it's easier to work with long pieces of wire instead of little
chopped up pieces. You can even string up some of the wire between posts
or trees and walk back and forth a couple times with the wooden blocks.
I've done this too.



Spehro Pefhany May 7th 14 06:06 PM

straightening wire
 
On Tue, 6 May 2014 18:33:29 +0000 (UTC), Eli the Bearded
wrote:

Is there an easy way to take wire off a spool and get it straight?
I'm working with 12ga galvinized steel here, in lengths of about
two feet.

I know the jewelry people use nylon tipped pliers (squeeze tight
and pull through, repeat as needed), which seems fine for very small
soft wire, but I don't think that's going to work on this heavy stuff.

Elijah
------
has been trying to bend it straight by hand



Assuming there's a decent amount on the spool, this kind of thing
might work:

http://www.howarequipment.com/produc...straighteners/

I've used this kind of thing to straighten AWG 8 (about 1/8" diameter)
base-metal alloy wires.

You could probably whip something like that up with cheap skateboard
bearings.

Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany

Tom Gardner[_6_] May 7th 14 10:42 PM

straightening wire
 
On 5/7/2014 7:56 AM, Karl Townsend wrote:

A Pyramid Straightener consists of at least 3 wheels per plane of wire
to be straightened. one of the wheels is adjustable, often many groups
of three wheels on many planes are used.
http://www.durantco.com/wire-straighteners.php



Do you have any expereince with wire? :)

karl


Some, but I'm still ignorant!

Tom Gardner[_6_] May 7th 14 10:46 PM

straightening wire
 
On 5/7/2014 8:10 AM, Larry Jaques wrote:
On Wed, 07 May 2014 01:35:46 -0400, Tom Gardner Mars@Tacks wrote:

On 5/6/2014 2:33 PM, Eli the Bearded wrote:
Is there an easy way to take wire off a spool and get it straight?
I'm working with 12ga galvinized steel here, in lengths of about
two feet.

I know the jewelry people use nylon tipped pliers (squeeze tight
and pull through, repeat as needed), which seems fine for very small
soft wire, but I don't think that's going to work on this heavy stuff.

Elijah
------
has been trying to bend it straight by hand


A Pyramid Straightener consists of at least 3 wheels per plane of wire
to be straightened. one of the wheels is adjustable, often many groups
of three wheels on many planes are used.
http://www.durantco.com/wire-straighteners.php


Now tell us how you perm your wire brushes, too, sweetie!

--
If government were a product,
selling it would be illegal.
--P.J. O'Rourke


Most Oil tempered or High Tensile wire has a "memory" of being
straightened at the mill even though it has sat in open coil form for
years. Stainless Steel has to be re-straightened in less than a year if
kept in open coil form.

Larry Jaques[_4_] May 8th 14 06:02 AM

straightening wire
 
On Wed, 07 May 2014 17:46:35 -0400, Tom Gardner Mars@Tacks wrote:

On 5/7/2014 8:10 AM, Larry Jaques wrote:
On Wed, 07 May 2014 01:35:46 -0400, Tom Gardner Mars@Tacks wrote:

On 5/6/2014 2:33 PM, Eli the Bearded wrote:
Is there an easy way to take wire off a spool and get it straight?
I'm working with 12ga galvinized steel here, in lengths of about
two feet.

I know the jewelry people use nylon tipped pliers (squeeze tight
and pull through, repeat as needed), which seems fine for very small
soft wire, but I don't think that's going to work on this heavy stuff.

Elijah
------
has been trying to bend it straight by hand


A Pyramid Straightener consists of at least 3 wheels per plane of wire
to be straightened. one of the wheels is adjustable, often many groups
of three wheels on many planes are used.
http://www.durantco.com/wire-straighteners.php


Now tell us how you perm your wire brushes, too, sweetie!


Most Oil tempered or High Tensile wire has a "memory" of being
straightened at the mill even though it has sat in open coil form for
years. Stainless Steel has to be re-straightened in less than a year if
kept in open coil form.


Um, I meant crimped wire brushes. How you do dat?

--
If government were a product,
selling it would be illegal.
--P.J. O'Rourke

Tom Gardner[_6_] May 8th 14 11:14 PM

straightening wire
 
On 5/8/2014 1:02 AM, Larry Jaques wrote:
On Wed, 07 May 2014 17:46:35 -0400, Tom Gardner Mars@Tacks wrote:

On 5/7/2014 8:10 AM, Larry Jaques wrote:
On Wed, 07 May 2014 01:35:46 -0400, Tom Gardner Mars@Tacks wrote:

On 5/6/2014 2:33 PM, Eli the Bearded wrote:
Is there an easy way to take wire off a spool and get it straight?
I'm working with 12ga galvinized steel here, in lengths of about
two feet.

I know the jewelry people use nylon tipped pliers (squeeze tight
and pull through, repeat as needed), which seems fine for very small
soft wire, but I don't think that's going to work on this heavy stuff.

Elijah
------
has been trying to bend it straight by hand


A Pyramid Straightener consists of at least 3 wheels per plane of wire
to be straightened. one of the wheels is adjustable, often many groups
of three wheels on many planes are used.
http://www.durantco.com/wire-straighteners.php

Now tell us how you perm your wire brushes, too, sweetie!


Most Oil tempered or High Tensile wire has a "memory" of being
straightened at the mill even though it has sat in open coil form for
years. Stainless Steel has to be re-straightened in less than a year if
kept in open coil form.


Um, I meant crimped wire brushes. How you do dat?

--
If government were a product,
selling it would be illegal.
--P.J. O'Rourke



Simple, the wire passes through a set of gears.

Gerry[_2_] May 9th 14 01:12 AM

straightening wire
 
On Tuesday, May 6, 2014 1:33:29 PM UTC-5, Eli the Bearded wrote:
Is there an easy way to take wire off a spool and get it straight?

I'm working with 12ga galvinized steel here, in lengths of about

two feet.



I know the jewelry people use nylon tipped pliers (squeeze tight

and pull through, repeat as needed), which seems fine for very small

soft wire, but I don't think that's going to work on this heavy stuff.



Elijah

------

has been trying to bend it straight by hand


I believe I'd run it through a couple of 2x4 in a vice. I'd hook the wire to the back of my truck and pull 20-30' at a time then cut to shorter lengths as needed

Larry Jaques[_4_] May 9th 14 02:33 AM

straightening wire
 
On Thu, 08 May 2014 18:14:13 -0400, Tom Gardner Mars@Tacks wrote:

On 5/8/2014 1:02 AM, Larry Jaques wrote:
On Wed, 07 May 2014 17:46:35 -0400, Tom Gardner Mars@Tacks wrote:

On 5/7/2014 8:10 AM, Larry Jaques wrote:
On Wed, 07 May 2014 01:35:46 -0400, Tom Gardner Mars@Tacks wrote:

On 5/6/2014 2:33 PM, Eli the Bearded wrote:
Is there an easy way to take wire off a spool and get it straight?
I'm working with 12ga galvinized steel here, in lengths of about
two feet.

I know the jewelry people use nylon tipped pliers (squeeze tight
and pull through, repeat as needed), which seems fine for very small
soft wire, but I don't think that's going to work on this heavy stuff.

Elijah
------
has been trying to bend it straight by hand


A Pyramid Straightener consists of at least 3 wheels per plane of wire
to be straightened. one of the wheels is adjustable, often many groups
of three wheels on many planes are used.
http://www.durantco.com/wire-straighteners.php

Now tell us how you perm your wire brushes, too, sweetie!

Most Oil tempered or High Tensile wire has a "memory" of being
straightened at the mill even though it has sat in open coil form for
years. Stainless Steel has to be re-straightened in less than a year if
kept in open coil form.


Um, I meant crimped wire brushes. How you do dat?


Simple, the wire passes through a set of gears.


InstaPerm!

--
If government were a product,
selling it would be illegal.
--P.J. O'Rourke


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