Cable Stripping Method?

It would, though, then have to be longer which might be noticable.
Not wishing to dismiss the results of your experiments, but that assertion discounts the fact that conductors are cut to length after the sheath has been stripped.
 
They are tiny - what are they for, dolls house wiring? :mrgreen:


had to wear a cut proof glove on my left hand which was a pain.
Not as much of a pain as not wearing one.


I have yet to see a tool that strips the outer off twin and earth
I used to be sure that I once saw a video of one (one of those rolling promotional ones you sometimes see in hardware stores). It was fairly chunky, and basically you stuck the end of T/E into it, squeezed the handle, and it removed some sheath, stripped the ends of the L & N, and splayed the 3 cores out a bit.

But I've never seen anything like it for sale, and never known anybody else ever describe it, so either I imagined the whole thing or it was a failure.


Re stanley knives - one of mine with a retractable blade has a "setting" where on the first notch the very tip of the blade protrudes. You'd struggle to draw blood with it, but it is fantastic for drawing along the centre of T/E to score the sheath but not penetrate it, after which it can easily be torn. Or "cheesewired" without any risk of stretching.
 
I have one of those too chivers, its the type that want to rip the insulation off.
I found it useless on some wire types but OK on pvc 4mm wire.

However if I don't wear gloves when using it, its too easy to catch my fingers in the crimps within the handle and that effing hurts!
 
Does SFA re sheath removal, I'm afraid.

They work fine for the sheath, watch the video in the Amazon link! I use the Irwin version. Works for flex, too. It would only take 1.25mm² flex initially, so I filed a bit off the jaw to make it do 1.5 also. Only downside is the slight bitemarks left behind...

bitemarks.jpg


...but that's a damn site neater than the mess left by the cheesewire and side cutters method IMHO...

cheesewire mess.jpg


Scoring round it like andy11 said solves that, but he must be one of very few who bother! And that just brings back up the "risk of slicing the insulation" debate, which is what I thought was the point of the cheese wire method for the sheath in the first place!!
 
Well that's me told...

I've got two pairs of strippers like that - one CK, one Spear & Jackson, and I'm sure I have tried unsuccessfully to use them on T/E sheath.

Ho hum.
 
Well that's me told...

I've got two pairs of strippers like that - one CK, one Spear & Jackson, and I'm sure I have tried unsuccessfully to use them on T/E sheath.

Ho hum.

You've two pairs of Strippers? phnar phnar
 

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