Yes it is routinely used for that purpose
The facility to be pulled into wires is called ductility, several elements have this. These are ductile metals or alloys: platinum, silver, gold, aluminium, copper, nodular cat iron, rhodium etc.
The word is ductile. It is a physical property of many metals.
I think copper is cheaper.
Electrical wires are made from copper, as copper is a good conductor of electricity.
Yes. You can twist them together and wire nut them, or solder them together.
Copper Wire
I don't know but I think the physical property of this is state
Gold is the material that conducts electricity but cannot be pulled into wires. This is unlike the other materials like aluminum, copper and steel.
The facility to be pulled into wires is called ductility, several elements have this. These are ductile metals or alloys: platinum, silver, gold, aluminium, copper, nodular cat iron, rhodium etc.
The word is ductile. It is a physical property of many metals.
I think copper is cheaper.
we use copper in wires because it is a conductor of both heat and electricity
Electrical wires are made from copper, as copper is a good conductor of electricity.
YES!! because the property of matter to pulled into wires is DUCTILITY
Yes, and so can all other metals (however very hard metals like tungsten wear out the dies very rapidly).
If you mean 2 bare copper wires those are the ground wires. Tie them together and then connect the light fixture ground wire which will be green or bare copper to those ground wires.
no its light. its in wires and those are light. i scrap wires for the copper to sell. i would know