The ability to be drawn into a thin wire is a property known as ductility. Iron has ductility.
Property of a material by virtue of which, it can be drawn into thin.. wire.
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Isohytes are lines drawn on maps joining places of equal rainfall.
If you mean the drawing by Leonardo da Vinci, it was drawn with pen and ink.
Here is a site that explains why quite nicely: Gauge Systems Two of the most common gauge systems are AWG (American Wire Gauge, also known as Browne & Sharpe) and SWG (Imperial Standard Wire Gauge). In both systems, a higher gauge means smaller wire. The AWG system was developed in America to be used for electrical applications, and is still used for non-ferrous wire. (Ferrous means iron-based.) The gauge numbers are based on electrical resistance, which increases as the wire gets thinner. (Picture the electrons flowing through the wire as a bunch of people running down a hallway. If the wire/hallway gets thinner, it slows them down since there's not as much room for them to get through. That's what resistance is.) When the gauge number increases by 3, the higher (thinner) wire will have twice the resistance of the lower (thicker) wire. A general rule of thumb says that when the gauge goes up by 6, the wire diameter is halved. (So, for example, 22g would be roughly half as thick as 16g.) * http://www.mailleartisans.org/articles/articledisplay.cgi?key=10945
Iron wire is a thing, and I'm pretty sure they don't cast it that way, so yes.
Metals can be pulled or drawn into a wire, so gold is an example.
The insulation on a wire is applied after the wire is drawn to size.
A substance that can be drawn into wire is indeed called ductile
Ductility
It is ductile.
No. You cannot
Andrew Bullen has written: 'Drawn together' -- subject(s): History, Iron and Steel Trades Confederation, Iron and Steel Trades Confederation. Wire Workers Section, Trade unions
Aluminum and Copper Wire
Ductile.
Ductile
The metallic property of ductility allows it to be drawn into thin wires.