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What are the Different Weaving Methods of Stainless Steel Wire Mesh

Stainless steel wire mesh is a versatile material used in various industries such as mining, petroleum, chemical, food, pharmaceutical, and machinery manufacturing. However, the weaving method used in creating stainless steel wire mesh is not a one-size-fits-all approach. In this post, Hebei Maishi, a leading manufacturer of stainless steel woven mesh, will explain the six weaving methods used in creating stainless steel wire mesh.
 
Plain weave: In this method, each warp yarn crosses up and down in each weft thread, weaving at a 90-degree angle. The diameter of the warp wire is the same as the weft.
 
Twill weave: Each warp yarn crosses up and down every two weft wires, and each weft wire crosses the weave pattern of each of the two warp wires.
 
Dutch weave: In this method, the diameter of the warp and weft are different, and the number of meshes is different. The characteristics are thin weft and thick warp. The warp direction is the length direction and the weft yarn is the width direction. The dutch weave mesh is divided plain dutch weave and twill dutch weave.
 
Double-wire Dutch weave: Similar to the twill Dutch weave, this method has two weft threads closely attached to the warp. It is mostly used for micron-level filtration.
 
Five-heddle weaving: The warp and weft are not made of monofilament but are woven with several separate wires, providing a stronger stainless steel wire cloth on the basis of twill weave.
 
Hebei MAISHI - your best partner of high-quality stainless steel wire mesh.
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