A recent experience has convinced me to stay away from fire. Since I last posted, I've acquired 3 metal rods in 1/8" 3/16" and 1/4", I think 2 are steel and 1 is zinc, or something. I'll take my spool of wire, which is not actually on a spool, and count out some length, usually 5-10 rounds of the stuff, and clip it off. Then, I take that shorter length and stretch it into a mostly-straight length. I had trouble with the loose coiled wire kinking and messing up everything, and the clipped straight length solves this. I then bend one end by hand (leather glove) to double it up, and stick that end and the rod into the electric drill, so that the drill's clamp will close on the wire. Then, carefully wind using the drill. Using this, I've realized that 16g 1/8" ID glavy rings are impossible to work with, as they're too small to actually use. 20g 1/8" ID enameled copper makes fantastic micro rings, however.
Then I realized we had a dremel sitting around not doing anything, so I bought a saw attachment for it and messed with cutting rings. 1st issue, it would cut a beautiful ring, and then the ring flies off onto the patio somewhere. One-hundred thousand delicate micro rings, lost to the void of sparse grass and dirt that covers the patio! So I got a vice and put the whole coil in it, and cut from one side. I think this vice is off-center, because some of the rings would fall out, although they didn't fly away so I still recovered them. Then I picked one up...
Turns out that when you saw through galvanized steel with an electric saw, the friction alone heats it up enough to scorch off fingerprints. I'm permanently holding an icepack now and typing with one hand, with a ring-shaped whelp on my left thumb. Fortunately it appears that my fingerprints survived, although that would make for an interesting story to tell my nieces and nephews ('cause I'm not having kids).
I also have some trouble cutting this copper. It wants to have horribly frayed and sticky ends that scrape across skin and clothes.
Oh also, I ordered from The Ring Lord, and am going to get a massive bag of tiny aluminum rings, as well as some slightly larger aluminum and bronze rings, and some nice pliers, clasps, and earring hooks.