No hay artículos en el carro
No hay artículos en el carroGerardo Valdez
Comentado en México el 26 de marzo de 2025
Excelente herramienta realiza su función a la perfección, corta cables sin problema, real mente una gran opcion de pela cables
Niclas
Comentado en Suecia el 21 de enero de 2025
Saknade den övre skalningskniven. Men den var billig..... 299SEK
Jared De Jesus Cortes Gutierrez
Comentado en México el 31 de mayo de 2024
No se pudo cargar el contenido.
Cliente
Comentado en Italia el 10 de febrero de 2024
E veramente un buon prodotto !!!
Rob T
Comentado en Australia el 20 de octubre de 2024
You want tools that just do the job and do it well with ease, then get your self a pair of these. Do everything they say and are light and comfortable.
JamesDS
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 26 de junio de 2022
When installing a whole house fan I had wires to strip in confined spaces with short pigtails. The connectors I used required 11mm of insulation removed and this stripper worked perfectly with 12 and 14 gauge house wire (THHN) as well as some 24 gauge vinyl covered control wire. The adjustment slider noted in the second picture increases gripping force when moved forward to the left. Usually I leave it fully to the right, but some of the very small wires requires more grip.Today I tried Tefzel wire used in aircraft which is notoriously difficult to strip. I have a collection of expensive blade strippers as well as thermal strippers for this. They are fiddly. The blade type require careful placement of the wire in the right size cutting hole. The thermal strippers requires careful timing of the heat and produce acrid fumes. The Knipex did 16 gauge Tefzel with its standard setting but did require the adjustment slider to the moved forward a bit for a clean strip of the 20 gauge green Tefzel. See first picture for an incomplete strip of the first green wire.Because there are no holes in a cutting blade with gauge labels, you don't need to know the precise gauge of the wire and you do not risk nicking any strands of a stranded wire. (One nicked or removed strand in an aircraft wire does not meet standards and must be redone. A big deal for silver coated 19 strand wires costing one or two dollars a foot.)
Charles Lee
Comentado en Canadá el 5 de julio de 2018
This works really well, at least for "normal" wires. It is fast and effortless to strip wires, and it almost makes it fun. Using the wire stop, the minimal amount of stripped wire is just over 5mm, which I'm hoping is good for computer PSU terminal crimps. Although the body is plastic, it seems to be well-made and feels pretty durable. The plastic body does make it light and easy to handle, though, so that is a plus.The one thing to keep in mind is that, because it is a self-adjusting stripper, it assumes that the wire you are stripping has a "normal" ratio of insulation to wire. Some wires, notably some speaker wires, have much thicker insulation, and won't work properly with this tool. Just keep that in mind. The cheap speaker wire does work properly with this, however. That is why I also bought the Capri wire stripper, since it seems to complement this tool pretty well: Also, for some reason there is another version of this tool for sale on Amazon that is more expensive: As far as I can tell, they are the same tool, despite having slightly different model numbers. I don't know if one is a revised version or not, but I went for the cheaper one.
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