YES! the screw cutters!! It's amazing, the number of people who have no idea the feature is even there!!I still use mine but only for the screw cutting feature. That part works great! For sripping wires I use one of the better models.
I’m far from a master electrician. But I’m proud of the fact that after all of these years, I haven’t lost these wire strippers.A true master of his skill.
The V-Notch type is junk. The 7" is useable.What's the difference between the two types Butter posted ?
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5 in. V-Notch Wire Stripper
Amazing deals on this 5In V-Notch Wire Strippers at Harbor Freight. Quality tools & low prices.www.harborfreight.com
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7 in. Wire Stripper with Cutter
Amazing deals on this 7In Wire Stripper With Cutter at Harbor Freight. Quality tools & low prices.www.harborfreight.com
Spend a little more and get a DoyleWhat's the difference between the two types Butter posted ?
![]()
5 in. V-Notch Wire Stripper
Amazing deals on this 5In V-Notch Wire Strippers at Harbor Freight. Quality tools & low prices.www.harborfreight.com
![]()
7 in. Wire Stripper with Cutter
Amazing deals on this 7In Wire Stripper With Cutter at Harbor Freight. Quality tools & low prices.www.harborfreight.com
What's the difference between the two types Butter posted ?
![]()
5 in. V-Notch Wire Stripper
Amazing deals on this 5In V-Notch Wire Strippers at Harbor Freight. Quality tools & low prices.www.harborfreight.com
![]()
7 in. Wire Stripper with Cutter
Amazing deals on this 7In Wire Stripper With Cutter at Harbor Freight. Quality tools & low prices.www.harborfreight.com
@BrandonV In our business we have 20 full time technicians building electrcial control panels all day long. All they do is route wires, label them, strip them and terminate them. Thousands of connections a day across those folks. None of them have ever used v notch strippers nor would they recommend them to anyone. No one who strips a lot of wire likes them.
These people never learn Richfinn. Why waste your time giving them the correct answer which they will never listen to anyway?Yep, you need a Weicon 5 wire stripper and some heat shrink crimpers at the very least.
These people never learn Richfinn. Why waste your time giving them the correct answer which they will never listen to anyway?
A lot of people use the cheapest V strippers infrequently enough to get a bad opinion of them. Very, very, very fine solid core wire (telephone and smaller) they work wonders on. My experience is with 24 gauge and smaller.
Yep, I too used to think those v-notch strippers were junk. Then a couple of friends who run a lot of comm wires told me they use those all day, every day. I seriously thought they were just messing with me, but no, it's their tool of choice for the very small wires they use a lot of. Apparently there's nothing faster and cleaner once you get used to them.
But for ham-fisted me, mostly dealing with larger wires, like 18 ga and up? I still don't use mine!
I have the same one, used it to wire my house. I still use it but these days occasionally, once every couple of months. If I was in production work I'd get something better, similar to the $22 Irwin that was mentioned. I did see a review where the only drawback to the Irwin was stripping romex conductors that have a plastic-type coating on the insulation, like NM. The Irwins will grab the plastic coating but might not grab the actual insulation on the conductor. Might take multiple strips to get it to grab and strip the coating before it can grab the insulation under the plastic coating.
Good thing wire strippers aren't a subjective thing... As long as the insulation is removed and the conductor isn't compromised and the user is happy it doesn't matter.
These people never learn Richfinn. Why waste your time giving them the correct answer which they will never listen to anyway?
They aren't, you are 100% correct, my opinion is basically meaningless in the grand scheme of things despite me trying out almost every wire stripper on Earth as a jobbing auto electrician and coming to the conclusion "you know this cheap $25 German one is the best quality I've ever used and never ever fails performance wise, I'll spread the word on GJ and hopefully save my "tool buddies" some cash and frustration"
I agree. All I was getting at was it depends on your use case. Insulation quality, thickness, etc. in the automotive space is different than the telecom space which is different than the home electrical or commercial electrical space.
I guarantee I have some wire those automatics would struggle with.
I'm pretty sure you do, however for a general purpose wire stripper these are the absolute bomb/and almost disposable cheap. But please watch the video.
They perform better than both the expensive Knipex versions (and all the rebrands) and are made in a first world economy, which will tick a lot of boxes for GJ guys
I would never recommend junk to my fellow tool enthusiasts, I've been in the game myself for nearly 40 years![]()
Fair point. I will check them out.
Sorry I have to shut off the engineering switch sometimes.
Are the Knipex rebrands or a clone of them?