A coat hanger is a horrible conductor of electric current. Doubt if it would work.
Also most distributor wires are hot. Since coat hangers aren't coated it could easily ground out.
A wire coat-hanger has no mechanical properties, as it comprises no moving parts, other than the atoms that form the metal from which it is made. Ideally, a wire coat-hanger would be stiff so as to withstand the weight of the coat (or article) hung from it without bending or becoming mishapen. It would also be diminutive in weight and size, in order to transport and store it easily.
Wire coat hanger
Wire coat hanger or push longer extension into it and pull out.
Extrude a circle along a polyline shaped like the wire hanger.
Assuming you have a standard wire coat hanger, you can either use a hacksaw or a pair of sturdy side-cutting pliers. Some ordinary pliers have little recesses near the jaw that can also be used but they tend not to make clean cuts.
You can us a satellite or even a wire coat hanger.
well im not sure which would fit best but a way you can find out is by taking a metal coat hanger or long strip of wire, unbend the coat hanger and shape it to the horses withers, then when you go to look at saddles just take the coat hanger with you and see which saddle fits the hanger best......never used it heard it works :)
In order to build a catapult you need a way to store energy. A spring, a bungee cord ect. In the medieval days they used tightly wound rope. I cannot see a way to store energy with a coat hanger.
Try threading a wire (coat hanger etc.) or low pressure air through drain
No it would not be made of copper as it oxidises green and you wouldn't want to get that over your clothes. It is usually made of stainless steel.
Rub a wire coat hanger over the dress to discard any static
Take a wire coat hanger straighten it out and fish it up the tube this should unclog it if not use compressed air