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* [https://www.australianfencepublishing.com.au/blogs/news/book-australian-wire-strainers John Pickard Australian ''Wire Strainers'' November 11, 2022] |
* [https://www.australianfencepublishing.com.au/blogs/news/book-australian-wire-strainers John Pickard Australian ''Wire Strainers'' November 11, 2022] |
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* Charles D. Young and Company. 1848, A Short Treatise on the System of Wire Fencing, in its Various Forms, as Applicable to Railway Purposes, together with a Description of Simultaneous Acting Iron Gates for Railway Level Crossings (Edinburgh).Google Scholar |
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==References== |
==References== |
Latest revision as of 12:29, 3 October 2023
This is not a Wikipedia article: This is a workpage, a collection of material and work in progress that may or may not be incorporated into an article. It should not necessarily be considered factual or authoritative. |
A Wire strainer is a device for putting tension on fencing wire to remove slack in the wires.
Wire strainers can either be permanently installed on the fence or a reusable tool. Fencing wire was first used extensively in the wearly nineteenth century but not common until the 1850s. Initially heavy gauge iron wire could be rigid, but lighter gauge and more modern steel wires required tensioning to prevent them sagging or separating when livestock tries getting through.[1]
The Hayes company located in Oturehua, New Zealand, developed a strainer with two clamps to hold the wires connected be chains. Alternately moving the jaws of the mechanism along the the chain. Once the wires are sufficiently strained they are looped together and tied.[2]
Further reading
[edit]- John Pickard Australian Wire Strainers November 11, 2022
- Charles D. Young and Company. 1848, A Short Treatise on the System of Wire Fencing, in its Various Forms, as Applicable to Railway Purposes, together with a Description of Simultaneous Acting Iron Gates for Railway Level Crossings (Edinburgh).Google Scholar