Thin 0.25mm guitar string type wire

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Dan Steely

Established Member
Joined
28 Jun 2019
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Location
Southampton
Hi all,

I'm after sourcing about 20m of 0.25mm diameter steel spring type wire.
The closest thing I can think of would be a steel guitar string.

I'm not sure what the the correct search term would be.
Can anyone help?

Many thanks
 
As above, 'piano wire' or 'music wire'.

You will do well to work out what 0.25mm is in wire gauge number as not everyone lists in metric.
 
An explanation of proposed usage:
Many year ago my job was assisting anaesthetists in hospital operating theatres. One diagnostic technique we used was to insert a central venous pressure catheter for monitoring blood volume. The CVP line was a long thin plastic tube that was inserted over a thin wire and into a vein. Once the distal end of the wire was in the right anatomical place, the catheter was slid over the top. Once the tip of the catheter was in the right spot, the guide wire could be removed.

Fast forward 40 years and I’m now running a repair shop specialising in coffee machines.

Coffee machine water heaters generally comprise of a spiral of metal tubing cast into a metal block together with the heating element. These heaters often block up with limescale right in the middle of the length of pipe. Injecting an acid solution at the inlet/outlet port fails because the liquid hits an air block in front of the limescale. My technique is to insert a fine PTFE pipe into the inlet/outlet until it hits the limescale – I then inject the acid. To help get the pipe into the right place I’d like to add some rigidity to the PTFE pipe by having some thin (0.3mm) spring steel inside the pipe to help guide its way….
Alternatively, put the wire in first, then slide the pipe over the top – then remove the wire.

Thanks again.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seldinger_technique
www.youtube.com/watch?v=HuJzn_PF118
www.facebook.com/bassettrepairshop/
 
An explanation of proposed usage:
Many year ago my job was assisting anaesthetists in hospital operating theatres. One diagnostic technique we used was to insert a central venous pressure catheter for monitoring blood volume. The CVP line was a long thin plastic tube that was inserted over a thin wire and into a vein. Once the distal end of the wire was in the right anatomical place, the catheter was slid over the top. Once the tip of the catheter was in the right spot, the guide wire could be removed.

Fast forward 40 years and I’m now running a repair shop specialising in coffee machines.

Coffee machine water heaters generally comprise of a spiral of metal tubing cast into a metal block together with the heating element. These heaters often block up with limescale right in the middle of the length of pipe. Injecting an acid solution at the inlet/outlet port fails because the liquid hits an air block in front of the limescale. My technique is to insert a fine PTFE pipe into the inlet/outlet until it hits the limescale – I then inject the acid. To help get the pipe into the right place I’d like to add some rigidity to the PTFE pipe by having some thin (0.3mm) spring steel inside the pipe to help guide its way….
Alternatively, put the wire in first, then slide the pipe over the top – then remove the wire.

Thanks again.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seldinger_technique
www.youtube.com/watch?v=HuJzn_PF118
www.facebook.com/bassettrepairshop/
I've heard of 'transferable skills' but that is something else !!! 🤣🤣
 
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