A manufacturing path where cords are twisted is typically called a twisting process or a cord/rope manufacturing line , often implemented with specialized twisting machines such as rope twisters, double twisters, or cable/cord stranders.

What this process is

  • In industrial settings, cords, ropes, and wire cords are made on dedicated twisting lines that take multiple yarns or wires and twist them together under controlled tension and speed.
  • For textiles and ropes, this may be referred to as a rope twisting line , hawser‑laid rope process , or simply twisted cord manufacturing.

How the path usually works

  • Individual fibers are first spun into yarn; then many yarns are fed from bobbins into a twister that rotates them in one direction to form a strand, and then strands are twisted in the opposite direction to form a stable cord or rope.
  • For metal wire cords (e.g., tire reinforcement or cable), a double twister plus an “over‑twister” may be used so the wire elements are twisted together while managing elastic and permanent torsional strain along the production path.

Terms you can use

If you need a concise name for “the manufacturing path where cords are twisted,” common phrases include:

  • “Cord twisting line” or “rope twisting line”
  • “Cable/cord stranding and twisting section” in a cable plant
  • “Wire cord twisting process” or “double‑twist cord line” in tire‑cord and wire industries

If you tell more about the context (textile rope, electrical cable, tire cord, etc.), the terminology can be narrowed further.