I also have this question:
https://electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/318562/wire-wrapping-power-groundThe Stack Exchange answers don't seem very informative. It seems like there must have been a lot of wire-wrap lore that is now lost, or at least hidden. Googling for wire wrap howtos come up with a few hackaday videos and Garth's primer, but nothing really detailed. (Not to knock the primer - I'm getting pretty decent at at making individual connections thanks to studying Garth's example; far fewer crossovers than at first!) But, how *did* Bill Herd connect to those bare ground rails? And check out those bypass capacitors; they're *insulated.* Did he hand-insulate the leads?! Also, they appear to have gone on last, since they're on top. Why is that?
When I was (re)learning how to solder, a lot of people recommended an old US Navy engineering manual as still being a best practice guide. Is there something like that for wire-wrap? Did each engineer have to re-solve the same problems and develop a kind of personal "artistic" style?
I ask partly because I want to improve my skill; but also because this is kind of an example of a general abstraction that interests me: how much did experts in (some field) have to invent themselves, and how much was learned from prior sources? (I asked a similar question on the Retrocomputing Forum about where Gary Kildall got the know-how to write CP/M.)