Ton ton
Well-known member
Are the Knipex wire strippers decent quality? If yes, which model works well with fine stranded aluminum wire? Thank you for the help, everyone. Merry Christmas!
Gauge? Application?Are the Knipex wire strippers decent quality? If yes, which model works well with fine stranded aluminum wire?
www.kctool.com
I am a cost conscience DIYer. I agree with sparky !I've been stripping wires for 29 years, April will make 30 and I've tried a few different types of strippers. Without fail, I always end of going back to the old school Ideal T-strippers.
That tiny stuff is not aluminum wire; it's tinned copper.
Solid large gauge aluminum wire is sometimes used for supplying power to buildings. Kinda the opposite of what you're doing.
Copper-coated fine strand aluminum (CCA) wire in large gauges is also used in cheap jumper cables to deceive the unwary. It's coated with copper and looks like copper unless you look very closely at the cut ends, or hire a lawyer to sift the fine print for the term "CCA".
Anyway... if you KNOW what gauge wire you're working with, and that it's good old 'merkin AWG, and you can see the size markings and accurately target the correct hole every time, then the olde-fashioned strippers with an assortment of sharp-edged holes in them work well.
However, if you're working with a variety of unknown and unmarked wire, and it's sometimes metric gauge wire, and it's often that teensy-weensy-beensy stuff found in electronics, LEDs, etc. then an automated stripper will give you the best odds of consistent success.
This Irwin, for example. It works great, but the head is rather bulky and you need a fair bit of free length to work with. It works well in some situations, but not others.
Another good style was mentioned above, the plastic-handled "puller" style. This is the Knipex version, but there are many different brands selling the same basic thing. This fits into some spaces better.
Shame you had a bad experience with the Carlyle's. I've switched to the ones on the left in this pic, and like them better than any I've used:I need a variety of Guage stripping, mostly residential type of wire, both aluminum and copper. One wire stripper pliers I do not recommend is the Carlyle from Napa. They have a crimper @ the back and I pinched my finger in the crimper. The Milwaukee 6in 1 is ok but it doesn't strip really small aluminum wire that you find in electronic devices. Hopefully you can make some sense out of my paragraph. Thank you for your help!

None of those will work for the teensy-tiny wires the OP is talking about. They can be useful for home or some vehicle wiring.
I'm just a home improvement person that only occasionally does wiring, but the T-5 is what I use and serves me just fine. Compact, light, and not very expensive. Pretty sure I got the idea for them from watching a Pro Electrician on a big job/renovation I contracted outI've been stripping wires for 29 years, April will make 30 and I've tried a few different types of strippers. Without fail, I always end of going back to the old school Ideal T-strippers. There are at least three types so that anything from #32 up to #8 can be stripped. Day to day I use the T5 which covers 18-10, but there is the T6 that strips 16-26, the T7 that strips 24-32, and the T8 that covers 16-8. They also have the curved handle style that other swear by. I've tried those and they work as well as the old style, but I just don't like them.
Nobody likes the Williams ?!!? They're bad-***, made by Stride-Imperial USA. They used to make them for Milbar back in the day too.
Not a fan of the model with the crimper or the bolt cutter however.
The 23503 ? I use that one for the spark plug terminal crimper. It works the same as an open barrel crimper for spark plug terminals.
I like the most compact tool possible so I don't run into clearance issues.
In that case the 23533 is the one to have for sure. I have one and I like it better than my Klein Kurves.
Williams is starting to become my new favorite industrial brand versus Proto.
Yes , the one in the middle is the one I used. I have the other wire strippers as well.
www.engineertools-jp.com
These are the Engineer wire strippers I mentioned (good for small gauge wire but not as easy to use as the Weicon no.5)
![]()
PA-06 / PA-07 / PA-14 | ENGINEER INC.-Global
Wire strippers giving a very round finish of conductors (wires) PA-06 PA-07 PA-14www.engineertools-jp.com
I'm thinking "ouch" when I look at those handles.
I've got a few tools from Engineer, strippers/crimpers/screw extractor pliers.
I don't know what the story is with the crazy looking grips, but in everyday use they are pretty nice to use (but very compact compared to Euro/USA tools)
Their website is shite, but they do seem to have some good options for the tiny wires the OP is working with.Crazy to me that no one has mentioned:
Home | JOKARI
Die JOKARI GmbH & Co. KG ist Spezialist in der Abisolier- und Entmantelungstechnik für sämtliche Kabel- und Leitungstypen. Jetzt Abisolierwerkzeug finden!jokari.de
