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#47330 01/13/05 10:54 PM
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 814
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BigB Offline OP
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I was lying in bed thinking about wire prices and trying to figure out how Romex is manufactured (I know, I need a life). I know the copper is formed by drawing it thru dies, and I assume it is drawn thru the insulating material which must be in a liquid state, but I can't figure out how the individual conductors are packed so neatly into the jacket and at a cost effective method. I did a search and came up with nothing.
Maybe someone has been in a Romex manufacturing plant?

#47331 01/14/05 02:37 PM
Joined: Nov 2004
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I used to work in the extrusion industry so I’ll take a quick stab at this. All the following is a best guess and absolutely no facts are implied. In the extrusion industry there’s a process called “over-the-core” extrusion, where material (plastic) is fed through a die where the material is formed/shaped around the core (in this case it would be the copper wire). In the case of Romex, it’s probably a two-part process. First, the insulating material (nylon?) is formed over the copper using the “over-the-core” extrusion method. Exiting the extruder the wire goes through a waterbath to cool and cure the material, and is then fed onto a large spool.

Once the individual insulated conductors are on large spools, they are fed into a secondary extruder. The material that makes up the outer jacket has a lower melting temp than the insulating material, so the insulating material maintains its integrity and doesn’t re-melt.

As far as keeping everything “neat and clean” within the jacket, from an extrusion standpoint it’s relatively simple with guides, fixturing, and a properly designed profile die. To give you some idea of capability, we used to manufacture medical tubing with an OD of .0785 inches that was fed over a copper core which was later removed. We were able to control the thickness of each individual wall of the tube to plus or minus .0004 inches.

Hope this isn’t too confusing, and again, no facts are implied………

#47332 01/14/05 08:58 PM
Joined: Dec 2004
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Confusing? That's NEC domain. [Linked Image]


Sam, San Francisco Bay Area

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