ive had the irwin pair for almost 20 years, it has stripped 100s of 1000s of wires. its great, it works fine for box work, just stick it in the box and squeeze, done. it sucks on teflon shethed wires, but everything does for the most part.
I have used the blue handle Klein version for years and it has been the best automatic self adjusting I've used. And I've bought way too many. These Milwaukee's look identical just like alot of new milwaukee tools are klein clones. I think that you are studdering your squeeze and that's the problem with the blue wire. Try it as fast and smooth and complete squeeze as u possibly can. Same with the sheathing. Also after you remove the sheathing put all three wires in at the same time and it should stripp the hot an neutral at the same time withought damaging the ground. Interested to hear how it works out for you?
Heh. I picked up some Klien's that look identical to these Milw. this past year and once I got them setup/adjusted properly, they are great. Both brands look like they are using the same mfg. for the base tool. I do quite a bit of small-medium size projectes on old buildings, and having one of these on the belt is pretty sweet. Especially for a geezer with arthritis.
I think there are several versions of this type. I will use them as my Romex Strippers from now on… but my coil pack wire I’ll just keep using my Regular style strippers.
When I used to wire up electrical panels at an extrusion plant I used to LOVE the Craftsman version of these I bought 20 or so years ago - they're really nice if you're working with 16, 14, and 12ga wire - and having to cut, strip, and land a LOT of them.
@@MORGANSMaintenance That's how I used to use them - they live on my pegboard now. For HVAC Service my 'Go-To' the the Klein 'All Purpose' needlenose plier with the stripper and crimper.
I use my klien version of these for stripping just about anything that will fit in the jaws when I would usually have to strip it with a knife, stuff like SO cord and UF cable. It also works really good on solid wire that has "melted" slightly to the copper inside.
All the wires I’ve tried it on, if they don’t have that extra layer works great. If it has that… they still will work, it just takes some extra time. Thanks for sharing 👍
Great video. I have never been a fan of the automatic strippers. However, if I had a pair, I could see myself stripping the outside sheathing on Romex. As you said, if you have a panel and you are stripping a lot of Romex, that could make it a lot easier and you are not accidentally cutting into your wire. Thanks again for putting these together. I appreciate your time!
Yeah I haven’t ever found a pair I loved enough to replace my hand style… but I saw these stripped Romex sheathing and thought I’d give them a shot since I haven’t cared for the Handheld Kleins lately. Appreciate it 👍
The Klein Strippers Made For Romex blow The Milwaukee Away! There Are To many Adjustable Pieces On The Milwaukee Strippers!! They Made A Great Addition To My Wifes Tool Collection! But i Use The Kleins Every day!
I have a few different pairs of these. Irwin, Klein, and Jobsmart. I work on HD diesel so it's mostly 12-16 stranded wire. They work great in areas where there's room to fit them
I have Klein's version of these. They're awesome, particularly for working with NM-B, but yeah - they do struggle with that double-insulated stranded 12awg THHN wire too. Quick/aggressive squeeze seems to do the trick most of the time.
My buddy picked up the Kleins when he went to get a pair of these and they were out of stock. He let me give them a try, they are very much identical tools. 👍👍
I've got an almost identical pair made by Vice-Grip that i've had for about 10 years. They strip any wire down to like 6 gauge and will take just the sheath off of 12/2 or 12/3 Romex on the first pull, then strip all the conductors on the second pull.
I have the Klein Tools 11061 looks very similar to this they can be a bit finicky at times. They shine when you have a bunch of pig tails to do you can set watch TV and get them knocked out in no time. It's a repetitive stripper queen.
When you have difficulty to strip certain type of wire, pull the wire up ! It will lock the wire in position in the stripper !!! Have been working with the Irwin model since begin in the trade !!!
I will give that a try on that THHN Blue Wire… people have also been mentioning that you can strip multiple wires at once… I’m going to try that tomorrow too 👍
I have the Irwin and I have the same problem with the double-sheathed wire; it bites the clear layer and doesn't usually bite the whole thing properly, even with the set screw all the way tightened.
If I wired a bunch of new houses I can see how this tool would be useful but honestly I'm still good using my utility knife to peel back the sheathing and the Klein 9" hybrid pliers serves me well stripping conductors, splicing, and I can use it as a hammer too. So with that said, I'll be sticking with the same ol same ol for the foreseeable future.
I'd have to disagree, there's nothing more frustrating knowing that you could be doing things much more efficient with the right tool, whether it's stripping 1 wire or in my case, moving from fluorescent to led in my dropceiling. Especially if it's a few dollar difference. I could understand something like , mixing concrete in a wheel barrel instead of buying a cement mixer, mowing a half acre with a push instead of a sitd-down, cutting a couple pieces of wood with a hand saw instead of a miter or circular. That would make more sense, but for 20 bucks getting a perfect trim on a wire opposed to using a knife and pliers. I mean, you do you but that seems like your being stubborn or you are just super frugal.
@MORGANSMaintenance thank you for the review BTW. I went and got these because of the stupid THNN wire I bought for my project, unfortunately I seen this video after the fact, I thought maybe I just had a cheap wire stripper but it seems like it's more the wire than the tool. Honestly I was looking for a video explaining the little dials in more detail and the other style wire it claimed to cut (thank you). Wish I would have seen it prior to going and buying but oh well, I have 2 wire strippers now.
Great video, this kind of tools are available everywhere here in Europe. But I like the knipex precistrip 16. Weicon also makes great wire strippers, ones for solar panels. But I like the knipex forged wire stripper. But this one is great for romex.
👍👍 The Forged Wire Stripper is usually what I use, that or their Electrical Installation Pliers. I got this mostly for that NM cable I show. I don’t deal with it often, but I do every now and then.
Used for home and auto for 20-30 years. Great for tight areas where you need to strip. Can cut off cheap Chinese small gauge wires but just needs the right touch. Don't know what brand I had.
👍👍.. yeah I’m not sure the brand matters on this tool. I think they are all made in the same place. It’s like Walmart brand and Peter Pan peanut butter, made in the same place with a different label 😂
My Irwins look and operate almost exactly like those, including the inefficient stripping off both layers, but I do use my Irwins for everything else I can think of, including solar. I use my Wiha's when I am running conduit. I'm about to run 6ga in conduit, so I'm not sure what will work yet, guessing the Wihas.
automatics are ok if you are doing a lot of the same size maybe. I've had some Thomas & Betts with the many fine "teeth" does not last that long and requires some adjustment sometimes for vastly different types of insulation/gauges
I hate those yellow Kleins. Mine self lock. Someone told me that's a feature not a bug. I forgot the reason why. I have the Knipex forged which are the best wire strippers I have ever used. Still looking for auto's that work so I am going to pay attention to rest of the video. The problem you had with the blue wire is the exact problem I have with auto's. Southwire especially has some kind of coating they use.
Yeah the way these pull the insulation it’s just a bad set-up for that wire… I’ve also been looking as these Knipex amzn.to/41LRau6 The video reviews look nice, but several reviews act like the longevity of the cutter isn’t great. I’m hoping I can catch them on a deal one day. The Forged Wire Strippers are the best all around strippers I’ve ever used 👍
I tried it every which way… I had it pretty tight when I was doing it in the video. The problem is that wire has two coatings… the blue insulation, and a clear film… so it grips the clear film and pulls on it.
For me, doing industrial electrical maintenance, the only thing I like strippers for is to watch them when I’m drinking beers 😂 no, just kidding, I’ve only like them for doing control wiring.
I have the Klein tools one, 11061. Same mechanism, did Klein make these for Milwaukee? I've also seen the Irwin one, difference is the Irwin adjustable stopper looks fragile. Klein make these for them the same way Mechanix makes gloves for Klein? These strippers work great, even for removing outer protective layers without damaging the inner wires.
Yeah I picked up the Klein pair too… well my buddy did because the Milwaukees were sold out and I traded him. They do look identical. I really like them for removing sheathing
Southwire has a pair of pliers that look more heavy duty that i biught off amazon that work pretty well. They seem to work better than the klein romex specific strippers. As far as automatic strippers the only ones i like are the knipex auto stripper but i only use it for small gauge wire when when dealing with lighting. Otherwise the knipex forged wire strippers are all purpose enough and work better than anything else ive found. The klein katapaults are garbage. Thanks for all you do, you and doc from last best tool are my tool go to guys now, your findings seem to match what i find when i out my hands on tools.
Appreciate the confidence 👍 I have been looking at these Knipex strippers for some time. amzn.to/3H96IP7 The videos look like they work really well, but there are several reviews on how they dull pretty quick. I’ve been waiting to catch them on deal. I’ll look into the Southwire 👍
@@jimrodriguez8047 no not really. I had it turned all the way up. There are a few tips people give in the comments that help some, I made a part 2 video that shows those tips in action
That's my bread and butter tool for stripping wires. We use mostly Romex-like cables. I use Stanley and that Milwaukee looks like its rip-off. Even with exactly the same shitty cutter, that is simply not working. And the stop-block is the first thing you brake or loose without even using it once. My Stanley works like a charm and I cannot imagine any other tool for stripping cables. It's perfect for striping the outer layer first and then all three wires at once. It's a real time-saver. It's so convenient that I often use it to make temporary marking tubes for wires. I just strip the outer layer of Romex insulation, then cut that insulation to sections no longer than 3/4", mark them and slide them on the cables. Cheap, fast, easy and always available. The only downside is that I need to use separate wire cutters, but it's still faster than any other method.
Another person mentioned stripping the wires all together after the sheathing. I didn’t even think to try that. I’m going to give it a go tomorrow. I like these for sheathing over my other pair. No chance at damaging the wire. I always carry diagonals on me anyway. I’ve thought about getting the Knipex 12 64 180. The videos are great, but the reviews mention them dulling quickly. I’ve got them in my list waiting for a deal.
@@MORGANSMaintenance Remember that there are two types of those Knipex: 12 74 180 are for round cables and 12 64 180 are for Romex (flat) cables. What I didn't like about those Knipex was the necessity to pass the cable through them.While in Stanley/Milwaukee you just put them sideways. It's the same difference as with end cutters and side cutters. To avoid using those Stanley in tight spots (Knipex works better then), I just strip the wires before putting them into electrical boxes of all sorts. On Monday I'll make a short video to demonstrate how well fairly used Stanley strippers work. I've found a good video. It's in Polish, but you'll manage :) ua-cam.com/video/NXpWMLYh_oU/v-deo.html
I generally stick to Knipex for automatic wire strippers, but they tend to have different strippers for different functions, so you end up with multiple types. If you get experienced enough, you can strip pretty much all of our cable types in the UK with just a pair of cable shears.
@@MORGANSMaintenance Actually, I was thinking that mine were defective, but seeing as the Milwaukees behave the same way, I'm gonna blame the wire. Makes me feel better about the Irwins anyway. :-)
Kaiweets sent me a couple pair of wire stripers like these. I need to test them more, gave one away. I want the Knipex automatic wire stripper 12-62-180. Good video!
I’m am going to test these some more tomorrow. Many comments are showing the other brands of this type with strip the Romex Sheathing, but then also all three wires at once. I didn’t even think to try that. I’ve been looking at the 12-64-180, but I’m waiting hoping to catch them on deal. They dropped to $60 once and I’m mad at myself for not getting them then.
No, but several people from that area have been commenting that they love these style. They haven’t used the Milwaukee, but ones just like it. I think for most wired they are going to work great… just a few that it won’t.
Different types of THHN/THWN will always have different coating per manufacture, that blue wire is only what we can use, we never use solid wire, again in Chicago we cannot use non metallic sheathed cable/Romex so I’ve never had good luck with these over the years.
Yeah. These are great if they work on the wire you use a lot, and horrible if it doesn’t. These will become my new Romex Strippers… especially since I think you can strip all the wires at once after you remove the sheathing. It seems like you can with the other Brands, I’m going to check these tomorrow. These would definitely not do you any good.
Thanks for the suggestion 👍 I did… not in the video, but I tried it every which way before filming and it was still doing it no matter how I had it. I followed a couple other suggestions in Part 2 and a couple of those led to a little better success with it.
Klein made strippers just like thoes years before that and they work a little better than that and goes on sale from 16 to 18 bucks often (klein tools 11061) I have had issue like you have with that second coating romex but if I line the klein ones up just right you can strip both wires after the jacket at once. I have tried the Irwin and found them to be inferior to the kleins and keep the kleins in my bag simply to strip romex outer sheathing. The sad truth none of them are perfect but less effort than the old utilty knife. I'd you want good automatic stripper that don't disappoint abiet one wire at a time felo dragon automatic wire stripper (made in Germany). There's a ton of rebrands out there never tried them but I presume there rhe same factory
That’s what these will be for me… basically sheathing strippers. I’ve wanted to try one in the style of the Felo. Knipex also has a set that you can put the wire through and strip sheathing… but the reviews are mixed on how long they last amzn.to/41LRau6
My felo ones are 4 years old and work fine used often. The knipex heap ones ($50haha) I was told to skip by my coworkers and to step up to the $100+pair... maybe one day my budget will let me or kc tool will have a too good to pass up but not for something that is a luxury not a nessary all the time
@MattHmm-rq6dn that’s how I’ve been on these Knipex.. I’ve got them in my list… if the price becomes right I will try them. I have heard the same thing about the cheaper Knipex versions.
The Klein Strippers He Showed At The Beginning Blow These Pieces Of Crap AWAY!! I Have Owned Both Pairs And Can Tell; You That The Milwaukee Strippers Are Great For Your Wife To Keep In The JUNK Drawer! The Ones You Want On The Job Are Klein!
I picked up the Kleins because several people said that. They seem to be pretty much the same to me. Not just in performance, but identical tools made in the same place with different color handles. That doesn’t mean someone can’t get a junk pair of either one… there are lemons in tools just like cars.
@@MORGANSMaintenance I Was Saying That When It Comes To Wiring A House The Klein Do Better Than The Auto Strippers! I Pull The Wire Up Out Of The Box And Hit It With The Romex Stripper Then Pull The Jacket Off Through The Box! I Use The Length Of Them To Gauge How Much Of The Wire I Leave Sticking Out Of The Wall! It Will Double Fold Perfectly Behind The Plug-in Even If There Are Three Wires!
@@kevinlsims7330 ok… I got you now 👍. My only issue with those, is my pair gets into the wire when I strip the sheathing unless I’m super careful how much I squeeze. Maybe it’s just my pairs machining.
Those are knock off of the klein. They are complete garbadge. You will find when using the length limit stopper, the locking screw will come loose all the time. I have the same and used it this last summer to wire a car. They strip well but a complete disappointment as I needed precise length and the stop gate was always flopping down. Save your money people.
Milwaukee doesn't make these. they are made by some Taiwanese companies and rebranded under every brand you can think of. i've seen these sold as klein, crescent, irwin, every god damn brand on the planet is selling these. there are 10 different chinese brands also selling these on amazon and aliexpress. i personally have the klein branded version because it was on sale for $7 on amazon at one point.
@@wurlabyscott I got the Klein one too, my Milwaukee pair seemed to be the exact same to me. You never know, sometimes you can get a lemon with anything. Appreciate the feedback 👍
I have a few different pairs of these. Irwin, Klein, and Jobsmart. I work on HD diesel so it's mostly 12-16 stranded wire. They work great in areas where there's room to fit them
👍👍… I think if they work on the wire you use often, they are definitely worth having. That and I’m learning more about them from the comments to make them more useful.
I have a few different pairs of these. Irwin, Klein, and Jobsmart. I work on HD diesel so it's mostly 12-16 stranded wire. They work great in areas where there's room to fit them
Thanks for all the Tips - See them in action in Part 2 Here - ua-cam.com/video/_mtDVT5me8g/v-deo.html
ive had the irwin pair for almost 20 years, it has stripped 100s of 1000s of wires. its great, it works fine for box work, just stick it in the box and squeeze, done.
it sucks on teflon shethed wires, but everything does for the most part.
That’s my take so far… if they work on the wire you are using they are great.
Thanks for sharing 👍👍
I have used the blue handle Klein version for years and it has been the best automatic self adjusting I've used. And I've bought way too many. These Milwaukee's look identical just like alot of new milwaukee tools are klein clones. I think that you are studdering your squeeze and that's the problem with the blue wire. Try it as fast and smooth and complete squeeze as u possibly can. Same with the sheathing. Also after you remove the sheathing put all three wires in at the same time and it should stripp the hot an neutral at the same time withought damaging the ground. Interested to hear how it works out for you?
Thanks for the tips… I will give it a go tomorrow and try it out 👍
I’m going to pin your comment to the top, so hopefully people will read…
Heh. I picked up some Klien's that look identical to these Milw. this past year and once I got them setup/adjusted properly, they are great.
Both brands look like they are using the same mfg. for the base tool. I do quite a bit of small-medium size projectes on old buildings, and having one of these on the belt is pretty sweet. Especially for a geezer with arthritis.
I think there are several versions of this type. I will use them as my Romex Strippers from now on… but my coil pack wire I’ll just keep using my Regular style strippers.
You are right you need to squeeze smoothly and quickly also you should adjust the tension
Thanks for the thorough review. I appreciate the multiple attempts and gauges. It gave me a good idea of real-world use.
👍👍. Glad it helped. We all do different stuff so I try to think about how others might use stuff besides me.
When I used to wire up electrical panels at an extrusion plant I used to LOVE the Craftsman version of these I bought 20 or so years ago - they're really nice if you're working with 16, 14, and 12ga wire - and having to cut, strip, and land a LOT of them.
Yeah I see these as a bulk work tool mostly for me. For small stuff my other strippers just fit in my pouch better
@@MORGANSMaintenance
That's how I used to use them - they live on my pegboard now. For HVAC Service my 'Go-To' the the Klein 'All Purpose' needlenose plier with the stripper and crimper.
@@scrambler350 👍
You are correct. I've had the same issue with the 16:15 device. Thanks now I know it's not me.
@@christophermauro125 you might wanna watch my video pinned in the comments for tips from others to make them better
Home Depot is now carrying wagos in my area, even the new in line ones
Mine too… that’s where I got that bag on my bench… they are also cheaper than what I had been getting them on Amazon 👍
I have the annoying line it up with the hole stripper and wondered if these really work. Thank you for the demo and info.
I had those once… didn’t care for them.
You are welcome 👍👍
I use my klien version of these for stripping just about anything that will fit in the jaws when I would usually have to strip it with a knife, stuff like SO cord and UF cable. It also works really good on solid wire that has "melted" slightly to the copper inside.
All the wires I’ve tried it on, if they don’t have that extra layer works great. If it has that… they still will work, it just takes some extra time.
Thanks for sharing 👍
Great video. I have never been a fan of the automatic strippers. However, if I had a pair, I could see myself stripping the outside sheathing on Romex. As you said, if you have a panel and you are stripping a lot of Romex, that could make it a lot easier and you are not accidentally cutting into your wire. Thanks again for putting these together. I appreciate your time!
Yeah I haven’t ever found a pair I loved enough to replace my hand style… but I saw these stripped Romex sheathing and thought I’d give them a shot since I haven’t cared for the Handheld Kleins lately.
Appreciate it 👍
The Klein Strippers Made For Romex blow The Milwaukee Away! There Are To many Adjustable Pieces On The Milwaukee Strippers!! They Made A Great Addition To My Wifes Tool Collection! But i Use The Kleins Every day!
I have a few different pairs of these. Irwin, Klein, and Jobsmart. I work on HD diesel so it's mostly 12-16 stranded wire. They work great in areas where there's room to fit them
I have Klein's version of these. They're awesome, particularly for working with NM-B, but yeah - they do struggle with that double-insulated stranded 12awg THHN wire too. Quick/aggressive squeeze seems to do the trick most of the time.
My buddy picked up the Kleins when he went to get a pair of these and they were out of stock. He let me give them a try, they are very much identical tools.
👍👍
I have the Irwin version of those, and I like them a lot, but I do have the same issues with the double sheethed wires
Yeah… I assumed everyone did. The way these work by pulling without cutting a double layer is going to just be a problem.
Thanks for sharing 👍
I've got an almost identical pair made by Vice-Grip that i've had for about 10 years. They strip any wire down to like 6 gauge and will take just the sheath off of 12/2 or 12/3 Romex on the first pull, then strip all the conductors on the second pull.
I think they are all pretty close to the same… seems like yours might do a little more than these though.
Appreciate the info 👍👍
I have the Klein Tools 11061 looks very similar to this they can be a bit finicky at times. They shine when you have a bunch of pig tails to do you can set watch TV and get them knocked out in no time. It's a repetitive stripper queen.
If it works on the wire you are using.. I can see it being a time and wrist saver 👍
@@MORGANSMaintenance 👍🏾
When the wire has that transparent coating layer, I have found the slower I try to strip, the lower the chance it strips that in one go.
Yeah, many people said you have to just squeeze in a quick motion. 👍👍
When you have difficulty to strip certain type of wire, pull the wire up ! It will lock the wire in position in the stripper !!! Have been working with the Irwin model since begin in the trade !!!
I will give that a try on that THHN Blue Wire… people have also been mentioning that you can strip multiple wires at once… I’m going to try that tomorrow too 👍
I have the blue Klein and works great also I have the knipex automatic wire strippers and also works great
👍👍 Thanks for sharing, helps people get ideas for other options
I have the Irwin and I have the same problem with the double-sheathed wire; it bites the clear layer and doesn't usually bite the whole thing properly, even with the set screw all the way tightened.
Watch the trick in Part 2 someone showed me… it seemed to help a lot to pull the wire up (on the left side looking at it) when you do it.
I recently bought them and also had a difficult time cutting through the same wire and also high temp wire. So ill be returning them
👍👍… Yeah the cutters aren’t that stout for multiple wires
If I wired a bunch of new houses I can see how this tool would be useful but honestly I'm still good using my utility knife to peel back the sheathing and the Klein 9" hybrid pliers serves me well stripping conductors, splicing, and I can use it as a hammer too. So with that said, I'll be sticking with the same ol same ol for the foreseeable future.
It is more of a bulk work tool just because of the size. I get what you are saying 👍👍
I'd have to disagree, there's nothing more frustrating knowing that you could be doing things much more efficient with the right tool, whether it's stripping 1 wire or in my case, moving from fluorescent to led in my dropceiling. Especially if it's a few dollar difference. I could understand something like , mixing concrete in a wheel barrel instead of buying a cement mixer, mowing a half acre with a push instead of a sitd-down, cutting a couple pieces of wood with a hand saw instead of a miter or circular. That would make more sense, but for 20 bucks getting a perfect trim on a wire opposed to using a knife and pliers. I mean, you do you but that seems like your being stubborn or you are just super frugal.
@MORGANSMaintenance thank you for the review BTW. I went and got these because of the stupid THNN wire I bought for my project, unfortunately I seen this video after the fact, I thought maybe I just had a cheap wire stripper but it seems like it's more the wire than the tool. Honestly I was looking for a video explaining the little dials in more detail and the other style wire it claimed to cut (thank you). Wish I would have seen it prior to going and buying but oh well, I have 2 wire strippers now.
Great video, this kind of tools are available everywhere here in Europe. But I like the knipex precistrip 16. Weicon also makes great wire strippers, ones for solar panels. But I like the knipex forged wire stripper.
But this one is great for romex.
👍👍
The Forged Wire Stripper is usually what I use, that or their Electrical Installation Pliers.
I got this mostly for that NM cable I show. I don’t deal with it often, but I do every now and then.
Used for home and auto for 20-30 years. Great for tight areas where you need to strip. Can cut off cheap Chinese small gauge wires but just needs the right touch. Don't know what brand I had.
👍👍.. yeah I’m not sure the brand matters on this tool. I think they are all made in the same place. It’s like Walmart brand and Peter Pan peanut butter, made in the same place with a different label 😂
My Irwins look and operate almost exactly like those, including the inefficient stripping off both layers, but I do use my Irwins for everything else I can think of, including solar. I use my Wiha's when I am running conduit. I'm about to run 6ga in conduit, so I'm not sure what will work yet, guessing the Wihas.
I’m not sure these would do 6… they don’t claim to, but you never know.
I think these style are all pretty much the same from what I can tell.
I agree that they are best used for taking the outer sheathing off
@@Thedeadbeetsband Ive found myself only using them for that type of wire generally
automatics are ok if you are doing a lot of the same size maybe. I've had some Thomas & Betts with the many fine "teeth" does not last that long and requires some adjustment sometimes for vastly different types of insulation/gauges
I agree…Too me these would shine with bulk work 👍
I hate those yellow Kleins. Mine self lock. Someone told me that's a feature not a bug. I forgot the reason why. I have the Knipex forged which are the best wire strippers I have ever used. Still looking for auto's that work so I am going to pay attention to rest of the video.
The problem you had with the blue wire is the exact problem I have with auto's. Southwire especially has some kind of coating they use.
Yeah the way these pull the insulation it’s just a bad set-up for that wire…
I’ve also been looking as these Knipex amzn.to/41LRau6
The video reviews look nice, but several reviews act like the longevity of the cutter isn’t great. I’m hoping I can catch them on a deal one day.
The Forged Wire Strippers are the best all around strippers I’ve ever used 👍
HA. Nice 'feature', eh? I would donate mine to Goodwill, but don't want to make someone's life worse.
Would tightening the tension (grip) work on that blue 14 stranded any better?
I tried it every which way… I had it pretty tight when I was doing it in the video.
The problem is that wire has two coatings… the blue insulation, and a clear film… so it grips the clear film and pulls on it.
For me, doing industrial electrical maintenance, the only thing I like strippers for is to watch them when I’m drinking beers 😂 no, just kidding, I’ve only like them for doing control wiring.
That is many peoples preferred, but they take your tool money 😂
The only one I have had an issue with was the one with the seperate wire size cutter like the one you stated that you used and was hard to see
👍👍
I have the Klein tools one, 11061. Same mechanism, did Klein make these for Milwaukee? I've also seen the Irwin one, difference is the Irwin adjustable stopper looks fragile. Klein make these for them the same way Mechanix makes gloves for Klein? These strippers work great, even for removing outer protective layers without damaging the inner wires.
Yeah I picked up the Klein pair too… well my buddy did because the Milwaukees were sold out and I traded him. They do look identical.
I really like them for removing sheathing
I have had an issue with every style stripper like this and every issue has been with that same type of wire with the double coating.
It works good on the Romex, but it I had to use it all day on that THHN… I’d go crazy 😂
if you adjust the left knob then it works much better on wires with hard/thick isolation.
👍👍.. Appreciate it
I'm seeing Wera and Milwaukee tools on the bench. Pretty much the perfect set up. 😇
@@PimpinNProgress yeah, I love trying out all sorts of tools, but those two are some of my favorites for sure
Southwire has a pair of pliers that look more heavy duty that i biught off amazon that work pretty well. They seem to work better than the klein romex specific strippers.
As far as automatic strippers the only ones i like are the knipex auto stripper but i only use it for small gauge wire when when dealing with lighting. Otherwise the knipex forged wire strippers are all purpose enough and work better than anything else ive found.
The klein katapaults are garbage.
Thanks for all you do, you and doc from last best tool are my tool go to guys now, your findings seem to match what i find when i out my hands on tools.
Appreciate the confidence 👍
I have been looking at these Knipex strippers for some time.
amzn.to/3H96IP7
The videos look like they work really well, but there are several reviews on how they dull pretty quick. I’ve been waiting to catch them on deal.
I’ll look into the Southwire 👍
Try bending the wire up and away after grabbing it with the jaws, then strip. Haven't encountered issues with stripping anything doing it that way.
It does help, I had tried that when someone else mentioned it to me also.
Appreciate the heads up 👍
What if you turn the tension screw when stripping the blue wire? Does it improve?
@@jimrodriguez8047 no not really. I had it turned all the way up. There are a few tips people give in the comments that help some, I made a part 2 video that shows those tips in action
That's my bread and butter tool for stripping wires. We use mostly Romex-like cables. I use Stanley and that Milwaukee looks like its rip-off. Even with exactly the same shitty cutter, that is simply not working. And the stop-block is the first thing you brake or loose without even using it once.
My Stanley works like a charm and I cannot imagine any other tool for stripping cables. It's perfect for striping the outer layer first and then all three wires at once. It's a real time-saver. It's so convenient that I often use it to make temporary marking tubes for wires. I just strip the outer layer of Romex insulation, then cut that insulation to sections no longer than 3/4", mark them and slide them on the cables. Cheap, fast, easy and always available.
The only downside is that I need to use separate wire cutters, but it's still faster than any other method.
Another person mentioned stripping the wires all together after the sheathing. I didn’t even think to try that. I’m going to give it a go tomorrow.
I like these for sheathing over my other pair. No chance at damaging the wire. I always carry diagonals on me anyway.
I’ve thought about getting the Knipex 12 64 180. The videos are great, but the reviews mention them dulling quickly. I’ve got them in my list waiting for a deal.
@@MORGANSMaintenance Remember that there are two types of those Knipex: 12 74 180 are for round cables and 12 64 180 are for Romex (flat) cables.
What I didn't like about those Knipex was the necessity to pass the cable through them.While in Stanley/Milwaukee you just put them sideways. It's the same difference as with end cutters and side cutters.
To avoid using those Stanley in tight spots (Knipex works better then), I just strip the wires before putting them into electrical boxes of all sorts.
On Monday I'll make a short video to demonstrate how well fairly used Stanley strippers work. I've found a good video. It's in Polish, but you'll manage :) ua-cam.com/video/NXpWMLYh_oU/v-deo.html
@@Stefan_Kawalec 👍👍
Thanks for the clarification on the two.. the round wouldn’t do me much good.
@@MORGANSMaintenance I edited the answer couple of times, so take a look again, please.
@@Stefan_Kawalec I never even thought about stripping multiple wires. That makes sense… and makes it extremely more useful.
Right on brother. Great reveiw.
Appreciate it. 👍👍
I generally stick to Knipex for automatic wire strippers, but they tend to have different strippers for different functions, so you end up with multiple types. If you get experienced enough, you can strip pretty much all of our cable types in the UK with just a pair of cable shears.
Yeah I had been eyeing the 12-64-180’s… for the NM cable in this video, been waiting to see if the price comes down while I’m my list.
My Irwins are the same - they don't like that wire with the plastic sheathing.
@@dperreno yeah it’s basically like another sheathing, but a slippery one
@@MORGANSMaintenance Actually, I was thinking that mine were defective, but seeing as the Milwaukees behave the same way, I'm gonna blame the wire. Makes me feel better about the Irwins anyway. :-)
@@dperreno I also have the Kleins and they do the same
Kaiweets sent me a couple pair of wire stripers like these. I need to test them more, gave one away. I want the Knipex automatic wire stripper 12-62-180. Good video!
I’m am going to test these some more tomorrow. Many comments are showing the other brands of this type with strip the Romex Sheathing, but then also all three wires at once. I didn’t even think to try that.
I’ve been looking at the 12-64-180, but I’m waiting hoping to catch them on deal. They dropped to $60 once and I’m mad at myself for not getting them then.
Wagos and Ron Swanson. This dude is the real deal!
😂 👍👍
Favorite comment so far!
Have you tried it with the European three wire cable? I think I will get one, given how cheap it is.
No, but several people from that area have been commenting that they love these style. They haven’t used the Milwaukee, but ones just like it.
I think for most wired they are going to work great… just a few that it won’t.
Different types of THHN/THWN will always have different coating per manufacture, that blue wire is only what we can use, we never use solid wire, again in Chicago we cannot use non metallic sheathed cable/Romex so I’ve never had good luck with these over the years.
Yeah. These are great if they work on the wire you use a lot, and horrible if it doesn’t.
These will become my new Romex Strippers… especially since I think you can strip all the wires at once after you remove the sheathing. It seems like you can with the other Brands, I’m going to check these tomorrow.
These would definitely not do you any good.
Will it work with gray......outdoor wire???
I’m not sure.. I don’t have any of that in my garage, I don’t use it often. Maybe someone else will chime in… good question 👍
Where did you get that Klein coffee mug? 😂
@@Journeyman1642 I ended up getting mine on eBay… I think it was a promo item one year.
You should have adjusted the tension on the blue wire.
Thanks for the suggestion 👍
I did… not in the video, but I tried it every which way before filming and it was still doing it no matter how I had it.
I followed a couple other suggestions in Part 2 and a couple of those led to a little better success with it.
Klein made strippers just like thoes years before that and they work a little better than that and goes on sale from 16 to 18 bucks often (klein tools 11061) I have had issue like you have with that second coating romex but if I line the klein ones up just right you can strip both wires after the jacket at once. I have tried the Irwin and found them to be inferior to the kleins and keep the kleins in my bag simply to strip romex outer sheathing. The sad truth none of them are perfect but less effort than the old utilty knife. I'd you want good automatic stripper that don't disappoint abiet one wire at a time felo dragon automatic wire stripper (made in Germany). There's a ton of rebrands out there never tried them but I presume there rhe same factory
After looking the felo strippers no longer are madecthe same but the jokari 20050 are 100%the same as the original felo stripper
That’s what these will be for me… basically sheathing strippers.
I’ve wanted to try one in the style of the Felo.
Knipex also has a set that you can put the wire through and strip sheathing… but the reviews are mixed on how long they last amzn.to/41LRau6
My felo ones are 4 years old and work fine used often. The knipex heap ones ($50haha) I was told to skip by my coworkers and to step up to the $100+pair... maybe one day my budget will let me or kc tool will have a too good to pass up but not for something that is a luxury not a nessary all the time
@MattHmm-rq6dn that’s how I’ve been on these Knipex.. I’ve got them in my list… if the price becomes right I will try them.
I have heard the same thing about the cheaper Knipex versions.
@@MattHmm-rq6dnHave you used any of the Weicon?
Yah Irwin was first to market with that design. I like them
👍👍
Try these if you're trying to strip romex in a box
Southwire BoxJaw Wire Stripper
I will look those up, appreciate it 👍
Only 12-2 though…
I didn’t have any 12-3 to try, but the 12-2 was really close to the edge… I’m not sure it would fit.
The Klein Strippers He Showed At The Beginning Blow These Pieces Of Crap AWAY!! I Have Owned Both Pairs And Can Tell; You That The Milwaukee Strippers Are Great For Your Wife To Keep In The JUNK Drawer! The Ones You Want On The Job Are Klein!
I picked up the Kleins because several people said that. They seem to be pretty much the same to me. Not just in performance, but identical tools made in the same place with different color handles.
That doesn’t mean someone can’t get a junk pair of either one… there are lemons in tools just like cars.
@@MORGANSMaintenance I Was Saying That When It Comes To Wiring A House The Klein Do Better Than The Auto Strippers! I Pull The Wire Up Out Of The Box And Hit It With The Romex Stripper Then Pull The Jacket Off Through The Box! I Use The Length Of Them To Gauge How Much Of The Wire I Leave Sticking Out Of The Wall! It Will Double Fold Perfectly Behind The Plug-in Even If There Are Three Wires!
@@kevinlsims7330 ok… I got you now 👍.
My only issue with those, is my pair gets into the wire when I strip the sheathing unless I’m super careful how much I squeeze. Maybe it’s just my pairs machining.
They make such good products ... Thx
If these work I need the wire you use most… they are pretty nice 👍
Mine was $29.99
@@Thedeadbeetsband 👍
Those are knock off of the klein. They are complete garbadge. You will find when using the length limit stopper, the locking screw will come loose all the time. I have the same and used it this last summer to wire a car. They strip well but a complete disappointment as I needed precise length and the stop gate was always flopping down. Save your money people.
Appreciate you sharing your experience 👍
Milwaukee doesn't make these. they are made by some Taiwanese companies and rebranded under every brand you can think of. i've seen these sold as klein, crescent, irwin, every god damn brand on the planet is selling these. there are 10 different chinese brands also selling these on amazon and aliexpress. i personally have the klein branded version because it was on sale for $7 on amazon at one point.
Yeah I have since tried out the Kleins and they are identical 👍
Have you had the same issue with others?@Tactical_Manatee
Bought one, biggest pos ..
Certain wires it’s not great on. Romex is where it’s pretty useful for me.
Appreciate you sharing 👍
@@MORGANSMaintenance the cut blades were crossed and could not do crap, just staying with Klein..
@@wurlabyscott I got the Klein one too, my Milwaukee pair seemed to be the exact same to me. You never know, sometimes you can get a lemon with anything.
Appreciate the feedback 👍
Is it just a Chinese rebrand? Cause my experience with that style wasn't good. Stick to German made autostrippers
If I remember right I think the package said Taiwan… but I can’t remember, so not 100% sure.
These are junk
So far for me, It depends on the wire. Super nice on some, pain in the butt on others
I have a few different pairs of these. Irwin, Klein, and Jobsmart. I work on HD diesel so it's mostly 12-16 stranded wire. They work great in areas where there's room to fit them
👍👍… I think if they work on the wire you use often, they are definitely worth having.
That and I’m learning more about them from the comments to make them more useful.
I have a few different pairs of these. Irwin, Klein, and Jobsmart. I work on HD diesel so it's mostly 12-16 stranded wire. They work great in areas where there's room to fit them