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About Me: whomisit( 866Feedback score is 500 to 999) About Me

THIS AREA UNDER CONSTANT CONSTRUCTION

WHY BUY MY SABER GRIP WIRE WRAP

Is this what they mean by working the swing shift?


Here we have an early German worker drawing wire through a iron plate with a series of progressively smaller holes to obtain the gauge, diameter size, wire needed. the worker would use a pair of pliers to grasp the wire, then placing his feet on the base that holds the iron plate, use his legs to pull the wire through the sizing iron plate. The swing, a labor saving device, would allow him to pull back on the wire and then return to his original position to gain a new hold on the wire and do the whole process again. This could get real interesting since he was working with near, if not, red hot metal. His leggings were probably made from leather.

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Pop Quiz

Do you know why the higher the gauge number, the smaller the wire diameter is?
Click Here for the Answer

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Medeival Tools of Torture?


No these aren't torture devices, though they do use the same medieval labor saving technology.
Item #1 shows wire being drawn by means of a windlass.
Item #2 shows wire being drawn by means of a winch.
Item #3 shows wire being drawn by means of a reel.

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Is this what they mean by
Working Yourself into a hole on the swing shift?


This picture illustrates a medeival worker drawing wire with the help of a water wheel fitted with a reciprocating cam while sitting on a swing. Having harnessed the flow of a stream, the wheel turns the cam, which in turn pulls and relaxes the link to the specialized pliers that grasp the wire to pull it through the sizing plate. The worker rides the swing back and forth in order to grasp and pull the wire through the sizing hole.

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NOW FOR MY TWO CENTS WORTH

As you can see working with wire is an ancient and honorable profession. There has been those who have challenged my experience and question my knowlegability. I have supplied rolls and coils of wire to major players in the world of sword restoration. In museums across the United States, I've actually white gloved many a saber and sword. As a young adult, I spent hundreds of hours in the New Orleans Confederate Museum and at the Chalmette Battlefield in Louisiana.

There is much erroneous information about U.S. swords and sabers in print. I find myself constantly bombarded with insults hurled by individuals, whom I refer to as "flat earthers". Instead of looking at the facts before them, or even the very blades they are restoring, these so called experts quote chapter and verse from their high price tomes and name me a heretic. So be it, I'll show you what I know and let you be the judge.

TO SEE MY SHORT STUDY ON U.S. SABERS CLICK HERE

I am compiling this web page and others to demonstrate my findings to others who will listen and to help an author/editor, who is revising an already published book on American swords and sabers. Books should be used as a reference, not held as the word of God. People do the research for the books many value so highly, and people make mistakes.

Some may ask why I don't "restore" swords. Its not that I can't, its simply because I don't. I find swords have history to tell. They speak loud and clear to me in their original state. They are old soldiers with stories to share. Their scars speak volumes if one only listens. How many dented saber scabbards have been restored? Do you even know why many were dented by their original owners? Click Here for the Answer. This is a question whose answer can tell if you really know anything about military swords. Not the statistics that can be found in a book written by someone with a passing fancy and paying little attention to details. Many a cavalry and mounted artillery saber have dented scabbards because these were the tools of the real soldiers, not some faunning fop who sat in the shade on a hill sipping either a mint julip or a snifter of brandy, while others gave their lives for their beliefs and principles.

Every nick in each blade has to be translated, was this a brush with death in the heat of battle. Or simply a childhood near miss of a trip to the emergency room for stitches? Each dent in each scabbard tells of near cataclysm from musket ball, saber blow, sharpnel strike or of happy childhood play in days long gone by.

I may sound like a hypocrite, since I sell supplies to those who restore swords, but I am a realist. If someone is going to restore a sword, I may as well help them do it right.

My Original Civil War Washburn & Moen Wire Gauge


This is the gauge I use when working with wire. Note the photo insert with a closeup of the maker's mark. W&M MFG.Co., which stands for stands for the Washburn & Moen Manufacturing Company of Worcester, Massachusetts. Established in 1831, Washburn & Moen is noted for setting the pace for drawing wire for telegraph (1847), piano (1851), and barbed wire (1876). But most of all, they set two standards for wire gauges, the first being the Washburn & Moen Steel wire guage, which later became the American Steel Wire gauge, the second being the Washburn & Moen steel Music wire gauge. These gauges date to the mid 1800's, the time of the American Civil War.

The wire I work with is sized with the Brown & Sharpe gauge system. The Brown & Sharpe gauge system was established in 1855, which has been adopted in the United States as the American. 20 Gauge wire by the Washburn & Moen standard should measure an actual .0348. However, by Brown & Sharpe standard, 20 Gauge wire should measure an actual .0320. So, the Brown & Sharpe 20 gauge wire I work with is a little larger than 21 gauge by the Washburn & Moen standard.

Sound confusing? There are over fifteen differnt wire gauging systems, and at least a third of them were in use during the time of the American Civil War!.


SEE HOW I DE-FARBED MY REPRODUCTION MODEL 1840 ARTILLERY SABER CLICK HERE

Answer to Pop Quiz

Because that was how many steps, the times a wire was drawn through the sizing plate, it took to produce a wire of that diameter. Click Back on Your browser to Return to where you left off.

Answer to Why Were Saber Scabbards Dented?

Many a cavalry and mounted artillery saber scabbard were dented by their original owners to insure that their saber didn't bounce out of its scabbard while at a gallop or in a full charge into the cauldron of battle.Click Back on Your browser to Return to where you left off.

WHOMISIT, © 2004, Created - [April 6, 2004]
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The above page is maintained by: whomisit( 866Feedback score is 500 to 999) About Me

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