As an apprentice bench jeweler in a trade shop I would frequently roll and draw down various wire. There was a draw bench and I can't imagine doing it without one now.I ran across that chart while collecting the surprisingly large array of tools needed to draw wire and in the process of performing that task a couple things occurred to me:
1) It may well be THE engraving-related chore I hate the most;
2) I could do a fairly extensive instructional video on all the techniques, tips, & tricks I've developed over 40 years of drawing wire, but I ain't gonna...
Also you pay for the labour of having somebody else draw it down for you... I don’t know what the premium is because I have never bought wire...why would one draw their own wire? instead of just buying it the right size.
im completely new in the subject so please forgive my ignorance.
Are you talking flush or raised inlay??say speaking of drawing...............does anyone, with the wealth, knowledge and experience in these trades have a formula for inlays? etc: width x depth = wire diameter please? Rob
Sorry to you old timers...... you all have your own way. But this just might help a newbie to inlay a line.single wire, flush ....................say .030 wire?
I was probably just doing the math in even numbered B&S gauges. My small drawplate only goes down to 0.0047" (0.12mm), which would be about 37ga. Yeah, I've used that hole from time to time, but not in years. The hard part isn't the drawing*, it's inlaying anything with it. Which is a royal PITA if it's anything but a fairly straight line. Literally like inlaying a hair...I think the smallest I've drawn is 30ga. You draw 38ga?!!