OP
Jeff Ivers
Well-known member
I recently redid some landscape lighting in front of the shop. As part of the process, I replaced the wire because what was out there had become extremely hard with age. Tried to strip some of it for recycling using the old manual methods I have used in the past with no success. The insulation was too stiff to slit with consistency and If I did get it slit, I could not spread it apart to extract the wire. So, I decided to try a wire stripping machine.

I picked this up for about $30. I had a couple of short lengths of solid and stranded wire on the workbench and, right out of the box, it stripped them great. So, I turned my attention to the landscape wire that I had already separated into separate strands instead of lamp-cord like double strand.

This is what happens if the blade is set too deep.

Once I got the blade depth right, it would slit the wire, but the insulation was so stiff I could not successfully remove the wire.

I discovered if I ran the wire through a second time at about a 90 degree angle to the first slit, I would end up with enough insulation removed that I could remove the wire. Sometimes the wire would want to twist on me and not maintain the 90 degree separation, so sometimes I fed the wire through a 3rd or 4th time. I also found that it was a lot easier if I worked on 4' or less lengths at a time.

I picked this up for about $30. I had a couple of short lengths of solid and stranded wire on the workbench and, right out of the box, it stripped them great. So, I turned my attention to the landscape wire that I had already separated into separate strands instead of lamp-cord like double strand.

This is what happens if the blade is set too deep.

Once I got the blade depth right, it would slit the wire, but the insulation was so stiff I could not successfully remove the wire.

I discovered if I ran the wire through a second time at about a 90 degree angle to the first slit, I would end up with enough insulation removed that I could remove the wire. Sometimes the wire would want to twist on me and not maintain the 90 degree separation, so sometimes I fed the wire through a 3rd or 4th time. I also found that it was a lot easier if I worked on 4' or less lengths at a time.


























































