From delicate telecom wiring to precision pole-climbing, from mission-critical aerospace cables to CAT6A, conductor prep has become an art form. The signals and locations where technicians are working mean that nicks from the wrong size slot (or twists from using unsized cutters) make the job difficult, if not impossible. In the shop, high-cost thermal and laser wire strippers meet modern needs but are not practical in the field.
The Price of Problems
Wire failures in aircraft or high-end computer servers can lead to enormous downtime expenses. Consider costs for:
- Repairs
- Crew travel to remote locations
- Missed contractual deadlines
- System failures due to small connector errors
A nicked conductor — or a cable that fails due to guessing proper stripping length because the conductor is exposed — can be the root cause of complex problems. How challenging is diagnosing intermittent data transmission errors or grounding problems under time and cost constraints?
High current wiring can be compromised over time. Proper wiring operation in vehicles or other mechanically demanding situations can produce system failures. Proper and accurate wire stripping serves as the proverbial “ounce of prevention” that avoids cascading downtime and repair costs.
The Job Done Right On-Site
Quality wire strippers provide repeatable and reliable results. Consider the Maxim® 6 Ergonomic Self-Adjusting Wire Stripper. Because of its ergonomic handle and autoform stripping jaws, the stripper forms neatly around any radius cable, safeguarding the inner conductor from nicks. Since it features a built-in wire stop and can take round, oval and flat-wire cable, it is both versatile and reliable.
Some wire cutting and insulation removal tools provide only an adjustable cutting edge that relies on operator skill to make a minimal depth cut and twist to remove insulation. A series of standardized cutting channels might do the job, if …
- The right one is selected
- The wire is perfectly centered in the channel>
- The operator is rested, skilled and patient
- Working conditions are ideal
Those are a lot of conditional expectations; if anything is less than ideal with most cutters and strippers the field technician leaves behind wire damage, conductors of improper length, and bad connectors.