The diagram given illustrates the way in which wires are manufactured for daily use purpose.
Looking at the illustration, it is immediately evident that wire production is a manmade lincar process requires various machine and equipment that is mostly done by machinery rather than by hand. Additionally, there are ten main stages involved in that process, beginning with preparing ingredient, ending with creating wire product.
In the first step, Raw materials including coking coal and iron ore are first combined put in the oven. After which are placed into a blast furnace heated to 1300°C. The resulting product, called reduced coke, is then sent to an arc furnace heated at 1800°C, where it is combined with lime. This mixture is sent to another furnace, also at 1800°C, for further processing.
At stage six, The output from the furnace is then transferred into moulds, or optionally into a vat, depending on the production route. Next, The molten metal is next passed through pressing and shaping machines to form the wire shape. After shaping, the material enters another blast furnace (150°C) to be slightly reheated or tempered for final processing. Having been cooling, ready to cool down in a cooling chamber. The process ends when the finished product ready for industrial or commercial use.
