>Only comment is that these require you to get the wire positioned between
>the correct hole on the cutter blade. Get it off center and you either get
>a bad strip or a cut wire.
That's the downside. You have to be careful but otherwise it's a great tool.
>The Paladin tool uses a pressure-sensitive set of blades that automatically
>strip _any_ wire size anywhere on the blade with no nicking. (there is a
>range of sizes that it works on - mine is about 10 to 22 gauge) It is fast.
>Also, the Paladin tool holds the bit of insulation until you release the
>handle - you can cut and strip and then move the tool over a garbage can to
>drop the waste.
I haven't used one of these--yet. All the ones I've seen were more
expensive but the idea is cool.
>Both are good.
I still have to have a pair of fixed strippers for finer wire, though.
>Also, Paladin makes a coax stripper that is cool but really really fussy to
>set up. I use one of Larry's strippers for that - this one (the cutter
>blades are replaceable) is sized for the coax I use - one hole cuts the
>external insulation, one cuts the wire braid and one cuts the internal
>insulation.
Coax strippers are great if you're not very good with an X-Acto knife.
Pricey, but they do the job perfectly.
--
Terry Bowman, KA4HJH
"The Mac Doctor"