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In the past, some comb binding machines would come with a wire closer.
Nineteen loop wire is designed to be used with a plastic comb binding pattern.
Comb binding allows a book to be disassembled and reassembled by hand without damage.
However, the best known of these authors had the manuals reprinted in comb bound format and these are still available (2012).
Comb binding uses a 9/16" pitch rectangular hole pattern punched near the bound edge.
However, the binding spines for this style are designed to work with the 9/16" plastic comb binding hole pattern.
The hole pattern needed for ZipBind spines to work is the same one used for comb binding and will usually be made through paper drilling.
Comb binding (sometimes referred to as "cerlox or surelox binding") is one of many ways to bind pages together into a book.
To prepare documents for comb binding there are 19-hole punches for letter paper and 23-hole punches for A4 paper.
Laminating pouches and binding sets can be bought for a small fee (30p for a 100 page comb binding set) at the helpdesk.
Applications for paper drilling are e.g. file holes for different ring binders, loose leaf collections, rows of holes for wire comb binding and tags.
Comb binding is sometimes referred to as plastic comb binding or spiral comb binding.
In the United States, comb binding is often referred to as 19-ring binding because it uses a total of 19 holes along the 11-inch side of a sheet of paper.