If you are referring to wire ropes then there are quite a few types of splice and joint that can be used. However, if you meant wire as in conductor used for electrics then there are other choices. The common ones are swaging or crimping using ferrules (sleeves) either in-line or as end fittings, cable clamps or clips, spelter sockets, soldered joints (electrics only), screwed clamps, wedge sockets, flemish eye splice, hand splice.
Fibrous joints.
types of wiring support system
There are two general types of joints, movable and immovable. Under the movable category there are four types of joints: Hinge joints: in knees and elbows Pivot joints: in neck Gliding joints: in wrists and ankles Ball-and-socket joints: in shoulders and hips
The 4 moveable joints are called the Ball-and-socket, Hinge, Pivot, and Gliding joints.
hinge jointspivot
Fibrous joints.
The 6 types of movable joints are:hingespinball and socketglideconvexconcave
which of the following is not one of the three basic types of major joints in the body
There are knees and elbows, they are the major joints.
There are six types of synovial joints in the body. They are also called freely movable joints. They consist of: ball-and-socket, hinge, pivot, saddle, ellipsoidal, and gliding. The gliding joints (carpal bones) aka planar joints (move in a plane). The ellipsoidal joints (metacarpals) aka condylar joints.
types of wiring support system
There are two general types of joints, movable and immovable. Under the movable category there are four types of joints: Hinge joints: in knees and elbows Pivot joints: in neck Gliding joints: in wrists and ankles Ball-and-socket joints: in shoulders and hips
Immovable joints and slightly movable joints are related because they are two types of joints that are functional junctions between bones.
The 4 moveable joints are called the Ball-and-socket, Hinge, Pivot, and Gliding joints.
there are actually five types of joints in the human body. the two types that are most commonly referred to are the ball and socket (hips and shoulders) and the hinged (knees and elbows). the other types of joints are: immobile joints (the joining of bones in the skull); semi-mobile joints (in the ribs and vertebra, offering limited range of motion); cartilagenous joints (the joints between the vertebra in the spinal column, cartilage between the bones allows for motion) information found at infovisual.info.
There are hinge joints like the knee and elbow, then there are ball and socket joints like the shoulder and hip joints.
The joints in the body that have the most movement are called synovial joints, or freely moving joints. Technically they are classified as diarthrotic joints. The difference between synovial joints and the other types of joints is that they contain a synovial sheath that supplies them with synovium, a lubricating fluid. Of the six different types of synovial joints the ball-and-socket joints have the greatest amount of movement. The four ball-and-socket joints in the human body are the ileofemoral joints, hip joints, and the glenohumeral joints, the shoulders.