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Flush Cutters for Stainless Safety/Lock Wire

Colin Len

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Jan 30, 2013
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Long Beach CA
I recently picked up a Clamptite tool and have plans to make some new garden hoses and air lines. I then realized I should probably invest in some decent flush cutters. I have a couple basic sets of nippers but non that are flush and most are made for softer materials. I've mainly been buying Knipex when I need new pliers and the such but other than these high leverage flush cutters (which seem like complete overkill) all I can find from them are cutters made for plastic.

I expect this will be mainly for smaller wire - currently 0.041 stainless steel but possibly as thick as 0.062 since that's what my Clamptite can handle.
 
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timgunn1962

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Mar 31, 2018
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Lancashire, England
Those Knipex high-leverage flush cutters appear to be for soft metals and plastics. I am pretty sure I've never seen a flush-cutting plier for stainless. Harder/tougher wire needs even harder cutting edges. Hardness tends to go hand-in-hand with brittleness. Flush cut geometry doesn't give enough support to the cutting edge for it to survive cutting hard wire.

I have always used a pair of Felco C7 cutters for Stainless and other relatively-hard wire. They tend to give a pretty tidy flat end.
 
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Colin Len

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Good catch on that, I just saw metal at first, guess those aren't overkill, lol. Not that it matters as I wasn't really considering them anyway, just an example of what I was finding from Knipex.

The hardness of SS is my whole reason for asking. I figured there'd be something out there though, especially for such small wire. I'm fine if they aren't perfectly flush, just the best I can get to have a wire end that isn't like a razor blade when cut.
 
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JradM

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I'm interested too. I've only ever seen flush cutters advertised for plastic and copper. Doesn't seem to be such a thing for steel - but it would be nice to be wrong.
 

GeoBruin

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Colin Len

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Jan 30, 2013
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Long Beach CA
Ouch, yeah, those are a bit pricey for this situation. I'm not opposed to spending a little bit on a nice tool but this is probably 2-3x what I could justify in this specific instance as it's not something I'm likely to use a ton.
 
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