First, welcome to the community.
In addition to Pete's comments, here are my thoughts:
1. Why are you getting rejects at each step of the manufacturing process? Wouldn't your efforts be better served to understand what is causing the rejects and work to manage those inputs to prevent the rejects.
2. I believe you mean visual inspection rather than manual (though your point may be it is not automated visual inspection). It would be beneficial (both efficiency and effectiveness) to be able to quantify the defects with a continuous measure rather than pass-fail criteria. You might need to get creative (e.g., ask yourself how to measure the wire damage, locational metrics may also be useful, sometimes defect densities can shed light). Defects or defectives as a response pose multiple issues. Not only does visual inspection have the challenges of effectiveness, but it can also be easily biased and aggregates possible failure mechanisms making causal relationships difficult to ascertain.
3. You can use P/NP-charts (Defectives) or C/U-charts (Defects) to assess consistency, but again you really don't want to consistently make defects.
"All models are wrong, some are useful" G.E.P. Box