Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.
-
Decent Wire Strippers
Anyone reccomend a decent pair of wire strippers. I've had cheap ones, expensive ones and they have all been rubbish. Don't want to spend the earth, just something that will do more than a few jobs before getting blunt.
-
I used to have a pair stanley strippers that looked like a dinosaur- they broke after several years service and I replaced them with Rolson ones which look the same but are slighly smaller and therefore useless for thicker wire.
This is a link the the Rolson pair- I wouldnt buy these again but have posted the link so you can see the style- Stanley dont seem to make the ones I bought anymore otherwise I would grab a couple of pairs as they are so easy to use...
http://www.halfords.com/webapp/wcs/s...ource=shopping
-
Originally Posted by
ppentertainments
Anyone reccomend a decent pair of wire strippers. I've had cheap ones, expensive ones and they have all been rubbish. Don't want to spend the earth, just something that will do more than a few jobs before getting blunt.
I thought these were an item that lasted for ever.
Had mine for about 20 years which I bought from a Car Accessory Shop rather than say Maplins.
Below is mine ---these are the automotive version which might be tougher?
http://compare.ebay.co.uk/like/16083...d=369791945309
Last edited by CRAZY K; 30-07-2012 at 06:29 PM.
-
I used to be a an electrical control engineer after starting as a wireman and I remember using Sealey strippers like this http://www.rapidonline.com/Tools-Equ...tomatic-301297
These strip different diameters of wire in the jaws and were very reliable.
If you are just fitting plugs and sockets why not just get a pair of good wire cutters and carefully cut the insulation at the required point?
-
Originally Posted by
chrisj
If you are just fitting plugs and sockets why not just get a pair of good wire cutters and carefully cut the insulation at the required point?
Because I am too heavy handed and inevitably cut right through the wire
-
-
Originally Posted by
CRAZY K ROADSHOW
We all do that
Those cutters on my last post have predetermined diameters to cover normal wire sizes encountered in home/dometic/car electrics.
Dead easy then
I've got some of those you linked to and, tbh, they're pretty poor. They're just not sharp enough to be effective and you end up just squashing the wire instead.
I've mentioned before working at Apple and having an in-house repair workshop. The engineers used to have cutters/crimpers that were "BT" branded and were almost identical to these?
http://www.snssafety.co.uk/ripley-bt...b63115db4cc299
Not cheap, but they did a fantastic, and quick, job. Just put the wire in the relevant cutting part, give the tool a gentle squeeze and a bit of a twist and job done!
Dazzy D
Lightning Disco & Entertainment
Born to make you party!
-
uk.farnell.com/jsp/displayProduct.jsp?sku=1653513&CMP=e-2072-00001000&gross_price=true
The ones I use...
Tel:0800 990 3030
The opinions here are those of an individual and not necessarily those of Dynamic Entertainment.
-
-
I just use poundshop scissors,they work for me,did all my uplighting extensions with them.
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules