Making Thin Wire
Making Thin Wire
Introduction
Yes, I know - this is supposed to be about swords. Nevertheless I will digress from the topic for a short. time. Swords
are fascinating objects for many reasons; good ones and not-so-good ones. But fascinating things are often not very
useful, consider for example atomic bombs, black holes, Lamborghinis, Las Vegas, opera, or (insert "it girl" of your
choice). So let's take a little time out and look at a few useful iron or steel objects here.
In order to get an idea of what people really wanted from their iron monger, let's look at what was going on in
Schmalkalden around 1740. Schmalkalden is described in the link; it was a center for mostly "civilian" iron and steel
products for a long time.
There were around 1000 artisans working with iron and steel in the town; for 912 of them I will give details:
180 20 Nails
70 8 Locks, padlocks
40 4 Files
30 3 Chains
20 2 Scissors
20 2 Special knifes
10 1 (Pitch) forks
8 1 Jew's harps
5 0.5 Hammers
2 0.2 Thimbles
Source: Buchwald
Quite amazing, isn't it? Eight jew's harp makers, whatever that is? A very simple and affordable instrument (see below)
that needed some good springy steel. Don't forget that in those good old times the only music most people enjoyed was
the one they made themselves.
Did you notice that major products are missing on this list? Normal needles for example. Considering that very close to
100 % of all females were constantly making and mending clothes, needles were major items in these times. Not to
mention farm / gardening implements like scythes, sickles, pitchforks, plowshares, coulters, spades, shovels, and so
Iron, Steel and Swords script - Page 1
on.
Obviously that stuff came from other specialized places, just as swords and armor.
Jew's harp (German: Maultrommel = mouth drum) and how you play it
It is not surprising that knifes are on the top of the list. Everybody needed a knife all the time as a matter of course.
While a knife blade could be just as complex as a sword blade, they usually weren't. Damaging or breaking your
knife was not a life-and-death matter. You got a new one (possibly making it yourself from a piece of scrap) or you
had it fixed.
It is, perhaps, a bit surprising that nails are No 2. So let's start with these unassuming things.
Source: Roman nails of Inchtuthil; a Roman legionary fortress in England, where 7000 kg of nails have
been found. The nails from around 1500 were found by Thorsten Straub with a metal detector in
Germany.
To make a long story short: Nails were hand-forged from thin wrought iron rods with square cross sections until about
1800. A tip was drawn out, then the rod was cut a bit above the thinner parts, stuck into a suitable hole on the anvil
followed by flattening the thicker part into the head. In the picture above the Roman smith did far better than the
medieval one, who either didn't have the skill or didn't care in this case. Maybe the Roman guy used the iron oboli for
that.
I'm not going into the modern methods starting around 1800, when using wires to make "cut nails" in some machines
more or less automatically took over.
Let's stop the nailing business now and go on to screwing. Whenever you do that from now on, consider first how
you, personally, would have made that screw. Think!
I'm rather sure you are going to screw up on this. Screwing around with all types of screws (wood screw, machine
screw, set screw, ...) is far easier than to make one.
You need a machine - some kind of lathe - for doing this, and that's why screws only came up at the end of the 17th
century. Screwing and screwing up, however, are much older techniques.
Needles, awls, and so on, needless to say, should be made from hard steel. That's not so easy, especially if you want
to make small ones with an eyelet.
One idea thus was to make needles from wrought iron and then to turn it into steel. Another one - for finer needles -
was to use steel wire, anneal it to soften it, work it, and harden it again.
The only point I want to make is that producing a needle was an extremely laborious process. Not only did you have
to work on a fine scale, with tiny hammers, punches, etc. you had to go through many steps before just one needle
was made.
Since there are all kinds of needles for all kinds of jobs, not to mention awls and other related stuff, artisans
specialized on just one basic type: needles for sewing, sailmaking, shoemaking; needles for surgeons, glovers, bag
makers, bookbinders. And so on. The Schmalkalden crowd was not doing much needlewise, just some of the
rougher stuff. Schmalkalden wives such had to needle their husbands to go and exchange some of their stuff for
good sewing needles from the specialists elsewhere.
Wire
Wires are extremely useful, especially for electricity. Having thin gold or silver wires helps in making fancy jewelry. But
iron and steel wires are also useful. Not just for the hilt of your sword but for many other things. Foremost, perhaps, is
the making of chain mail or just normal chains. More important for most people, however are the normal things you
make from wires: nails, needles, pins, awls, fish hook, sieves, musical instruments, suspension bridges, elevators,
cranes, sailing boats, ...
How does one make a wire with some given diameter? I'm rather sure that more than 99 % of all humans living now
do not have the faintest idea. The all should go an visit the wire museum in Altena, Germany. There you will find
out.
You do it by drawing a wire with a larger diameter through a die. You start with a relatively thick forged "wire" that
is as uniform and free from slag as you can make it. Than you draw it through a die, decreasing its diameter and
thus making it longer automatically. Then you repeat the process with a somewhat smaller die. Then you repeat the
process with a somewhat smaller die. .....
Wire drawing is a marvelously simple process - provided you do a lot of things just right.
The force you draw with must not be too large. More specifically, the stress employed (force per cross-
sectional area of the wire) must be lower than the yield stress. Otherwise you are just pulling out the wire
just formed.
The die must have an opening that tapers with just the right angle (around 20o in most cases). Wrong angle
and the permissible drawing forces will not be sufficient to do anything.
The reduction in the wire diameter can only be modest. A factor of 1.4 is already quite large. If you want fine
wires you must do it in many steps, each time reducing the diameter just a bit
The points made above follow from experience but also from (rather involved) modern theory. They are not negotiable. In
addition, there are also some practical concerns:
Your die should be very hard with a polished surface in order to reduce friction. You are also well advised to
use some suitable lubricant while drawing.
The drawing forces may be considerable. A yield stress of 200 MPa (wrought iron) calls for a drawing stress
of around 100 MPa. For a 2 mm diameter wire this transforms to a force of (200 · 106) · (3.14 · 10 –6) (N/m2) ·
(m2) = 614 N ∝ 60 kg. In other words: You must pull with almost "all your weight" or use some machinery as
shown below.
Source: Left: unidentified old book in Nürnberg museum library; Right: Biringuccio 1540 woodcuts
showing use of "machinery" for wire drawing.
For making dies you use the hardest steel available. Precision was everything and it is no accident that the term
"die maker" is still the name for professionals who can make all kinds of precision tools.
Wire pulling was skilled and very hard, not to mention boring work! Of course, the process of wire drawing deformed
or cold-worked the material and thus some work-hardening occurred. Some post-treatment of the wire may have
been required. And so on and so forth. Nevertheless, wire drawing is an old art. The Vikings did it and probably other
and older cultures, too. Here are some old dies:
Source: Photographed in the "Deutsches Drahtmuseum" (German wire museum) in Altena, Germany
Scythes have been in use for some time; here is a picture from 850 AD:
Some scythe smiths even used composite technology. A cut was made into a block of softer iron and a piece of hard
steel inserted. Then the blade was drawn out. That is, of course, also the way to make a katana, a Japanese sword.
And that is why scythes make good weapons, too. War scythes were regular scythes adapted for combat by re-
attaching the blade parallel to the haft. War scythes were widely used by Polish and Lithuanian peasants during revolts
in the 18th and 19th century, here is an example.. Scythe swords were also made but only one seems to have survived.
Scythes, like swords, are hardly used anymore, They have been made obsolete by big mechanical things that can
mow down far more grass or people than one expert swinging a scythe or sword. As far as they have survived,
however, they have hardly changed, witness these two modern blades, hand-forged by some artful modern
blacksmith.
Finally we hit the big question. What, exactly, is a coulter? Maybe you should know, it's in the Bible, after all. The
question is if you ever gave a plow a good look? Here is a rather basic one:
A coulter needs to cut through the earth! That is a rather abrasive stuff with embedded very hard stones. You can't
easily think of something more demanding for a slender piece of metal. When we make coulters we get rather close
to sword making once more. We might actually make one from a sword!
Horse Shoes
I just mention horseshoes because they demonstrate the development of another specialization: farriers had to be both,
experienced blacksmiths and veterinarians, knowing a lot about the anatomy and physiology of horses' feet. The word
comes from French "ferrier" = iron guy or blacksmith.
Protecting horses feet by some metal contraption is quite old. The Romans employed some "hipposandal" that
wasn't nailed down, however. It might have been the Celts who first used nailed-on horse shoes; first clear
archeological records are from the tomb of the 5th century King Childeric in France.
The farrier had to fit each shoe individually. Since horses are not overly fond of being shoed, he has to work quickly and
without making mistakes. Putting in a nail the wrong way could kill a horse, and badly fitting shoes are just as bad for a
horse as for you. Horse shoes should be made from mild steel and that doesn't make the job easier.
A lot of farriers were needed in times when horses provided for the only means of transportation and most of drawing
power. If you use an oxen-drawn wagon, chances are that your oxens were shoed, too.
Does this mean that there was no need for plate and sheet metal before 1850 (iron ships) or 1900 (cars)?. Not quite.
Armor of all kinds, your war-wear as the fashion industry, no doubt, would call it today, started as sheet metal just
like your car body.
It was Henry Cort (1741 (?) – 1800), the inventor of puddling, who also invented the rolling of iron / steel. In 1783 he got
a patent for a grooved rolling mill and from then on the use of rolling to produce all kinds of shapes was open. You
needed plenty of power from a steam engine for driving the rolls, and very good steel for the making the rolls, so once
more an invention feeds on itself since without puddling steel you couldn't make those things.
How was plate and sheet metal made before this?
With a hammer in a forge, of course. Up to about 1300 sheets were hammered out by hand, then increasingly with a
water-wheel driven power-hammer. Standardized sizes emerged in some places. In the Oberpfalz (North Bavaria) the
sheet size was about (25 × 32) cm2, coming in three thickness variants: