Talk:Wire
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Unless it lacks notability, "primary wire" should be described in the 'Varieties' section. ZFT (talk) 03:57, 9 September 2020 (UTC)[reply]
Taken from a usage viewpoint, the earliest use of hand carders is in the Luttrell Psalter (1320-40, Linolnshire). Recent excavations in the Amgidy valley suggest the Tintern wireworks were contemporary with the Abbey, per private correspondence with Will Davies, the CADW Inspector, who cites "early post-mediaeval". Recent discovery of culverting indicate the 1568 works expanding the existing mill runs to become leats were for a new artillery foundry closely connected with the Ordnance Board base at Monmouth, itself dating from at least 1415 (Shakespeare, Henry V): the wire works were older. The suggestion it was a Royal monopoly in the 1463 Edward IV interdiction of the export of wool combs is coherent with this.
I think it is misleading to call this picture from an overhead line conductor a "wire" as it is a "wire rope" and the whole rope consists of several wires. --Gunnar (talk) 06:22, 10 October 2021 (UTC)[reply]