I have no need for a chain link fence, or a machine to make one. I just like watching you make stuff that serves a purpose. Awesome job.
My dad made such a loom and we wove a mesh. Only in place of the drill was an electric motor with a gearbox, a full-fledged clutch from a motorcycle. The auger itself, on which the wire is wound, stood on the right corner of the table. Along the entire length of the table, at the end there were hooks with the same mesh pitch, on which the finished mesh was hung. The finished mesh hangs on hooks, and the new curved piece is returned to the previous piece of mesh. Having cut it off from the auger, I removed it from the hooks and hung it on a new piece of bent wire. At the bottom, the mesh was wound onto a stick in a roll of 10 meters and a width of 1.45 meters. In front of the auger there was a mechanism for leveling the wire from the coil, but sometimes the wire was hard in places, and I had to stop the machine and manually bend and straighten it. There was also an oil can on the auger, which lubricated the auger and the wire, so that the auger with the plate on which the wire is wound would wear out less and the mesh would not rust from moisture. Over time, prices for wire also increased. Demand for products decreased, and there was no opportunity to buy cheaper. And family circumstances developed in such a way that my grandmother’s house where the machine was located had to be sold. The machine was dismantled for other needs.