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New Icon Wire Stripper/Cutter/Crimper

Steel_Rain

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Another SO (PWCS9ACF) knock off, but appears to be decent:


$33 bucks.

SKU #70400
 
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four.cycle

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^ Six just arrived at the 6th Ave store but they don't have them unpacked yet and I'm leaving in a couple hours - be back the end of the week, hopefully. Might pick up a pair then if they still have any in stock. Looks interesting. 01/19/26 11:46 PST
 

ChevyEFI

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Again, I wish Harbor Freight would release a smaller size of this tool instead of opting for a Snap on Clone. Even in snap on trim, I think it's too big but, that's just me. :beer:
8" with the same features, or delete some sizes and take it down further?
 
OP
S

Steel_Rain

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With all these copies that they come out with, isn’t HF more or less saying that everything Snap On makes is perfect and requires absolutely no modification or revision. Pretty flattering to Snap On.

Good point, but that will put SO out of business at some point if they copy everything.

"Why buy the Cow, when you can get the milk for free (almost)".
 

bwringer

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Oh no, this again. :rolleyes:

I don't do a lot of electricalizing, and I despise this style of wire stripper. So not for me, no matter who makes it.

But if this sort of thing is the sort of thing that you like, I think HF is to be applauded for making it available to those of us who don't want to chase down a Snap-On man and develop a warm, loving, intimate relationship in order to perhaps someday obtain the rights to consummate our passion by paying $80 or more for pliers.

Snap-On stuff is great, yes. Expensive, sure, no problem. It's the process of laying hands on the stuff by luring the attention of an elusive man in a truck that makes it weird.

It is pretty damn big ... Icon does have this 7" wire stripper/cutter/crimper:
 

Shoreline_

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Springfield, MA
With all these copies that they come out with, isn’t HF more or less saying that everything Snap On makes is perfect and requires absolutely no modification or revision. Pretty flattering to Snap On.
I made a thread about this before. It's like companies who copy Rolex and the people who buy them. That's harbor freight and its customers in a nutshell who buy all the snappy / knipex rip off stuff and say it's just as good. I'm sure it is. I'm sure a fake Rolex tells time just as well (not sarcasm).
 

Meursault74

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Apr 1, 2019
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Oh no, this again. :rolleyes:

I don't do a lot of electricalizing, and I despise this style of wire stripper. So not for me, no matter who makes it.

But if this sort of thing is the sort of thing that you like, I think HF is to be applauded for making it available to those of us who don't want to chase down a Snap-On man and develop a warm, loving, intimate relationship in order to perhaps someday obtain the rights to consummate our passion by paying $80 or more for pliers.

Snap-On stuff is great, yes. Expensive, sure, no problem. It's the process of laying hands on the stuff by luring the attention of an elusive man in a truck that makes it weird.

It is pretty damn big ... Icon does have this 7" wire stripper/cutter/crimper:
I agree on that style. I have an old all in one of that style, not the quality as the one the subject of this thread though. Got it first long ago when starting out and then realized the limitations. I now have separate strippers and crimpers so that the action is at the end. If everything is out in the open, then those combo can work though (which isn't usually the case when I'm fixing something).
 

CHI_Tool&Die

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Chicago, IL
Again, I wish Harbor Freight would release a smaller size of this tool instead of opting for a Snap on Clone. Even in snap on trim, I think it's too big but, that's just me. :beer:
Every time they release a new plier I think the same thing. Why copy everything when you can make an in between size and really grab customers? I’m assuming HF is just lazy.
 

seber

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Deep East Tx.
I made a thread about this before. It's like companies who copy Rolex and the people who buy them. That's harbor freight and its customers in a nutshell who buy all the snappy / knipex rip off stuff and say it's just as good. I'm sure it is. I'm sure a fake Rolex tells time just as well (not sarcasm).
Actually, having dealt with both Rolex and high end fake, I would say that for most people, the fake will keep better time. Due to the fact that it can be adjusted by anyone who knows what they are doing. Rolex has to go to a Rolex center for adjustment. Sort of the same deal with Snap-on. Warranty is harder for most people.
 

zendriver

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Every time they release a new plier I think the same thing. Why copy everything when you can make an in between size and really grab customers? I’m assuming HF is just lazy.

So they should just go out of their way to sell something look different than what is popular?

That makes perfect sense :headscrat
 

CHI_Tool&Die

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So they should just go out of their way to sell something look different than what is popular?

That makes perfect sense :headscrat
Quite the opposite. They should actually do some real work and design something that is a different size than Snappy and every other Amazon company. You’re marketing yourself as a tool company, so get to work and put out some new stuff instead of being intellectually lazy and launching the same stuff with a different brand stamped on it. Big *** strippers are stupid. I bet most guys, myself included, would prefer a smaller size that’s more nimble but instead we get Snappy Part 2 the Imported Boogaloo.
 

rooster59

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Land of the Pines
That thing is wa-ay too big for me. Can't get it into any tight space I'm used to. Biggest it strips is 10? Should be 6 stranded for it's size.
 

L.Cheapo

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Every time they release a new plier I think the same thing. Why copy everything when you can make an in between size and really grab customers? I’m assuming HF is just lazy.
I saw a YouTube video featuring HF's "senior tool engineer".

He didn't look old enough to start shaving yet. He does appear to be able to order Snap On tools online, receive them, put them in a box, and send them to Taiwan with a note "Make these--cheap!" Which is apparently all HF is looking for.
 

whateg01

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doo dah, kansas, usa
My least favorite type of wire strippers but they’ll probably sell well
I know a bunch of people who have them. I'll be helping them with something and ask if they have any strippers so they pull them out and I say I hate them. Usually get a reply like, "oh, I never use them so I don't know if they are any good."
 
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Steve_P

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Agree that this thing is too damn big. I'm sure it'll sell, but the copy of the 7" model seems ideal for automotive (I have the Carlyle version); not sure about this monstrosity's use in automotive repair at 9" long. Given the slow rollout of the Icon pliers, a few a year, probably any other Snap On pliers would've made more sense to copy as far as sales potential. Basically, WTF were they thinking picking this item to copy?
 

cgrutt

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OMG that video! Couldn't get through it lol. Guy is all over the map.

Don't think I would use those strippers much. I actually like that style stripper but prefer the smaller sizes. I wouldn't use them for crimping. Maybe cutting screws every once in a while.
 

zendriver

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I know a bunch of people who have them. I'll be helping them with something and ask if they have any strippers so they pull them out and I say I hate them. Usually get a reply like, "oh, I never use them so I don't know if they are any good."
Sooooooo, which one's do they use, that they would hand you something different? :confused:
 

zendriver

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Quite the opposite. They should actually do some real work and design something that is a different size than Snappy and every other Amazon company. You’re marketing yourself as a tool company, so get to work and put out some new stuff instead of being intellectually lazy and launching the same stuff with a different brand stamped on it.
Maybe ,but I think they are in business to make money, not to be different than everybody else, but ok. :headscrat
Big *** strippers are stupid. I bet most guys, myself included, would prefer a smaller size that’s more nimble but instead we get Snappy Part 2 the Imported Boogaloo.
Here ya go, they already got ya covered.

 

AJHD

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Jan 4, 2020
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AZ
^ Six just arrived at the 6th Ave store but they don't have them unpacked yet and I'm leaving in a couple hours - be back the end of the week, hopefully. Might pick up a pair then if they still have any in stock. Looks interesting. 01/19/26 11:46 PST

Did you just swing by the store and get lucky they not only had them but also knew what you were asking for?

I don't even see them on the website yet.
 

zendriver

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This type is my favorite type

Quick, easy and gets in tight spots

 

zendriver

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I saw a YouTube video featuring HF's "senior tool engineer".

He didn't look old enough to start shaving yet. He does appear to be able to order Snap On tools online, receive them, put them in a box, and send them to Taiwan with a note "Make these--cheap!" Which is apparently all HF is looking for.

You’ve never seen the crowd of engineers cheering at a SpaceX launch? None of them look like they’re over age 30.

Besides, an engineer gets paid to engineer something. Maybe in the case of this wire stripper, Harbor freight doesn’t see any point in “reinventing the wheel.”

That engineer might help develop other products that they have built overseas or do some kind of durability test testing on existing products

We all know they are most likely a good product
 

purplezr2

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Central MN
I wonder if they have the same flaw my Snap-on ones have, where the sliding locker doesn't really fit in the notch to keep the pliers closed. They pop open with just the movement of he drawer opening and closing a few times
 
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neophyte

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Apr 23, 2012
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Pennsylvannia
I saw a YouTube video featuring HF's "senior tool engineer".

He didn't look old enough to start shaving yet. He does appear to be able to order Snap On tools online, receive them, put them in a box, and send them to Taiwan with a note "Make these--cheap!" Which is apparently all HF is looking for.
Yes, $30 slip joint pliers are “cheap”.
 

YesIHaveAHammer

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Jun 1, 2025
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That engineer might
He might be what's called a "value engineer" - someone who's sole job is to reduce the production cost of something someone else has designed.

They exist in construction. They will for example be finding opportunities such as reducing the number of windows or putting smaller ones in, reducing the number of electrical sockets, using cheaper building materials, etc.

In the case of these pliers, value engineering doesn't seem terribly hard - take another company's design, have it produced in a country with lower labour costs and fewer regulations.
 

bwringer

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Agree that this thing is too damn big. I'm sure it'll sell, but the copy of the 7" model seems ideal for automotive (I have the Carlyle version); not sure about this monstrosity's use in automotive repair at 9" long. Given the slow rollout of the Icon pliers, a few a year, probably any other Snap On pliers would've made more sense to copy as far as sales potential. Basically, WTF were they thinking picking this item to copy?
Agreed; why make and sell a competitor for that unwieldy 9" one? Seems odd.

I thought of the Carlyle version as well. (Icon has a 7" version too.)

So how come the Snap-On zealots aren't up in arms about those Carlyle "clones"? They've been around a long time. There are over 6,000 Napa stores but only about 1,600 Harbor Freight stores. What about THAT potential flood of "fakes"? I suppose they'll need to rush to the sides of their weeping Snap-On truck drivers to dry their tears with more $100 bills.
 

tarbellb

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Apr 17, 2011
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Oregon
Ive liked the functionality of these, BUT the joint has given me problems getting loose.

And yes, they feel a bit long even at 8"+

1769026235742.png
 

Drunkonunleaded

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Apr 14, 2019
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Detroit Rock City
This type is my favorite type

Quick, easy and gets in tight spots


These are the best if you're doing something automotive related. My recommendation is to spent an extra $10 or so and grab the wire stop. This gets you clean and consistent strips every time, which is important when you're wiring multi-cavity connectors.
 
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