Which is better? Knipex 13-72-8 or 13-82-8 Pliers?

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  • čas přidán 26. 08. 2024
  • Today we have a comparison video of the Knipex 13-72-8 Forged Wire Strippers and Knipex 13-82-8 Electrical Installation Pliers.
    Link To Purchase The Knipex 13-72-8
    KC Tools
    www.kctool.com...
    Chads Tool Box
    chadstoolbox.c...
    Link To Purchase The Knipex 13-82-8
    KC Tools
    www.kctool.com...
    Chads Tool Box
    chadstoolbox.c...
    #Knipex #KnipexForgedWireStrippers #KnipexElectricalInstallationPliers #Knipex13828 #KnipexWireStrippers #Knipex13828Pliers #Knipex13828InstallationPliers #Knipex13828ElectricalInstallationPLiers #KnipexMadeInGermany #Knipex #KnipexWireStrippers #KnipexPliers #Knipex13728 #KnipexPliers #KnipexElectriciansPliers

Komentáře • 59

  • @davidkiser4758
    @davidkiser4758 Před 2 lety +20

    The forged wire strippers 13-72-8 has small circular hole in the jaws that is smooth which is used to put a hook in the wire. You place the bare copper end about half way on the jaw and close and bend your hook. The smooth surface will not damage the wire.

  • @spanky4446
    @spanky4446 Před 2 lety +24

    No problem whatsoever

    • @youcanfindrace
      @youcanfindrace Před rokem +2

      Just bought the forged wire strippers because it does everything with no problem whatsoever

  • @brannonmonceaux1459
    @brannonmonceaux1459 Před 10 měsíci +3

    start your strip at an angle and square it up after you close them. this starts the separation easier and you dont have to fight pulling the insulation away.

  • @ijclnl48
    @ijclnl48 Před 2 lety +6

    The forged stripps seem best for many applications, leaving your Linemens behind and the electrical installation pliers seem best for Romex.

    • @JohnLennon-yg4ut
      @JohnLennon-yg4ut Před měsícem +1

      I don’t like using these as lineman’s because they suck at twisting stranded wire.

  • @TD-gf4ll
    @TD-gf4ll Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you for comparison video!
    I can now know the difference clearly.
    Each one has each purpose.
    I will get 13-72-8 first.
    Thanks.

  • @davereed6612
    @davereed6612 Před 2 lety +5

    Hey you got a few things incorrect here: if you look at the eauropena version (metric) the two wire stripping holes say 0.7mm-1.5mm which is 20awg to 14awg. Then the larger hole say 2.5mm that’s 12awg. Also the strippers have an indent in the upper jaw for making wire loops.

  • @BLASTIC0
    @BLASTIC0 Před 2 lety +3

    That was good… little repetitive, but in a good way, people don’t usually do that , but it was great to see. Great comparison my friend.

  • @Wood_Slice
    @Wood_Slice Před rokem +1

    @6:43 the forged one with the more wire stripping option can also bend the wire. At the tip there is a smooth wire cutout. Pinch the wire there and twist left or right.

  • @Thirshamma
    @Thirshamma Před 2 lety +7

    The forged strippers have a notch for bending loops in the head if you look closely. I've been using them for 6 months and the forged are perfect for installing switches and plugs. They have cutters, strippers, splicing heads, loop benders and 6-32/8-32 bolt cutters that don't require to be threaded to make a clean cut. The cutters are strong enough to use on 8-3 romex or 4awg single. Very expensive though

    • @youcanfindrace
      @youcanfindrace Před rokem +1

      Im upgrading to the forged strippers from a milwaukee 6 in 1 stripper. I used the bolt cutting holes to roll my wire into perfect J hooks everytime. I am excited to see if I can replicate that with these, as I find it more consistent and faster to bend J hooks faster than way than to use the head to bend it

  • @mtbwestel8406
    @mtbwestel8406 Před 2 lety +3

    You can also bend wires with the 13 72 8 without damage, that is what the little hole in the tip is for

  • @chrisfyfe1476
    @chrisfyfe1476 Před 2 lety +3

    I like both , the Super strippers put my Lineman’s pliers out of work , about 90% of the time !

  • @stephenkennedy6358
    @stephenkennedy6358 Před 2 lety +1

    My biggest complaint about both comes down two removing the sheathing from Romex.

  • @ThermalDynamicSevices
    @ThermalDynamicSevices Před 2 lety +1

    The first small notch in the forged wire strippers is for curling wires

  • @stewartxp2400
    @stewartxp2400 Před 2 lety +9

    Hell yeah! There you go! Thanks for the comparison, I've been debating on those forged wire strippers for a while now.
    A couple observations/questions (on the forged stripper): Isn't the little notch near the tip of the jaws for gripping wire without damaging it? Or making a loop?, also, have you tested the reaming capabilities of it? Lastly, linemans get inevitably used as a little hammer to bang on screwdrivers, pound down the bends on sheet metal, etc. Do they have enough heft or durability to do that?

    • @chrisfyfe9212
      @chrisfyfe9212 Před 2 lety +1

      They are the Arsch of the Kat , Now I hardly ever use Lineman’s pliers ! The screw cutting capability is to die for !

    • @chrisfyfe9212
      @chrisfyfe9212 Před 2 lety

      BTW , I love both formats , and own both , just depends on the job !

    • @Tre16
      @Tre16 Před 2 lety

      These definitely aren't for hammering anything.

    • @Thirshamma
      @Thirshamma Před 2 lety

      You can hammer with the forged strippers lightly like drywall/concrete anchors but nothing close to nails or conduit

  • @plsreleasethekraken
    @plsreleasethekraken Před rokem

    The forged wire strippers would be perfect if they had cross-hatched teeth and there was an insulated version. A more refined version of the Milwaukee 48-22-3078.

  • @chrisfyfe9212
    @chrisfyfe9212 Před 2 lety +1

    Both are great ! I own both , and Love Both ! Horses for Courses !

  • @user-zi3nf3tm5u
    @user-zi3nf3tm5u Před 3 měsíci

    Gracias

  • @paulmarsdensr1095
    @paulmarsdensr1095 Před 5 měsíci

    Nice Engineering Mat.

  • @littlejimmy7402
    @littlejimmy7402 Před rokem +1

    I have had I don't know how many pairs of generic strippers. Always kind of crappy, I've never cared about a pair. This pair is calling to me. I want a small yet capable "Putter around the house" pouch. This belongs in it. By having a competent plier, with strippers, with the best screw cutter available I can have 1 set of pliers in there that can do so much for basic home maintenance.

  • @TheFlutecart
    @TheFlutecart Před 2 lety +1

    Installation pliers are more for residential. The heavier ones are for industrial / commercial usage, just imagine wiring up a few boxes and a light switch with the big ones- overkill. But imagine wiring up a kiln outlet and breaker panel in a pottery shop with the little ones - useless. It's the home owner that will buy the big ones when only needing the little ones if he's too ambitious. But what we all wanted to see, was these suckers cut through aluminum clad 12//2 with the jacketed ground and then trim the armor. Then abuse them on steel armored cable just to see.

    • @plumbraider2265
      @plumbraider2265 Před 2 lety

      The cutters are a shear type, not meant for steel. Like the Marvel pliers, amazing for copper but ruined if you cut steel with em.

    • @ExpiredLifetime
      @ExpiredLifetime Před rokem

      As an automation engineer who has to wear all of the hats at times, I have both of these tools (VDE handles for the installation pliers) and they both are worth their weight in gold. With that being said, the installation pliers are the ones that go in my pocket when I’m not sure what I may need to carry with me while I’m digging through an attic; they’re an excellent jack-of-all-trades that does about 85% of what I need it to do. The super strippers cut a lot cleaner and are significantly sharper, however they’re spring loaded and make stripping 22ga and 24ga a nightmare because the feedback on the handles is crushed by the spring force.
      If I’m having to strip down a trunk of stranded 14/4 speaker cable? I’m reaching for my super strippers. If I’m having to be contorted in an attic to splice into a romex run to add power somewhere that only I would need it, then land a control cable on the thing I just put in? I’m taking my install tool so I have less stuff to drop or snag on rafters.

  • @Dom-nt4pi
    @Dom-nt4pi Před 2 lety +3

    the 82 pliers have a smooth wire groove in it meant for looping plier, though it can't grip the same way as the 82"s. Either way, that's a big difference you missed. Spent an hour showing stripping each gauge wire, yet you miss that.

  • @paulmarsdensr1095
    @paulmarsdensr1095 Před 5 měsíci

    A great video brother. Knipex is one of my favorite brands of tools. I am a Facilities Technician and a Mechanical Technician. Knipex tools rock.

  • @peterwilliams6188
    @peterwilliams6188 Před 2 lety +4

    No problem whatsoever.

  • @manguydude287
    @manguydude287 Před 4 měsíci

    I bought these to replace my milwaukee needle nose wire stripper but I was shocked to see that the fit and finish of these were far worse than the milwaukee which costs less than half the price. it was a big disappointment!

  • @michaelmaclachlan2152
    @michaelmaclachlan2152 Před 2 lety

    Both are great

  • @musikus7092
    @musikus7092 Před 10 měsíci

    I think they developed it mainly for the american market where such tools are popular.
    In Germany no electrician will use that.

  • @chrisfyfe1476
    @chrisfyfe1476 Před 2 lety

    The Pliers for Electrical installation , do come in dipped handles !

  • @venkateswarlucheemala2930

    Witch is the best

  • @mdovideo1414
    @mdovideo1414 Před 2 lety

    I carry both models in my tool tool pouch.

    • @Tre16
      @Tre16 Před 2 lety +1

      I can't think of a purpose to for the installation pliers if I already own the Forged pair.....

    • @Foxtrot-jr5qu
      @Foxtrot-jr5qu Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@Tre16 The only things I can think of is if you have to strip a live wire and maybe you need to use the flat tip of the insulated version of 13-82-8 to pull, hold or move a live wire. On paper, the 13 72 8 is the only tool anyone would ever want and need, especially if he doesn't work on live wires.

  • @GTB-yu2be
    @GTB-yu2be Před 2 lety

    I don't understand why the 13 32 8 are not spring loaded. If you take it apart the the hole is there for the spring. All that is missing is the actual spring.

    • @richmondstar4354
      @richmondstar4354 Před 4 měsíci

      Wonder what the spring look like inside as I never opened one…

  • @litondas2183
    @litondas2183 Před rokem

    Product price

  • @mehmetzonturlu8388
    @mehmetzonturlu8388 Před rokem

    Fiyat alabilirmiyim

  • @wax-ecstatic
    @wax-ecstatic Před 2 lety +1

    It really upsets me how everyone is making these forged strippers only go up to 20 awg. We need a low voltage version immediately.

    • @TheToolReviewChannel
      @TheToolReviewChannel  Před 2 lety +1

      I would like to see a VDE version!

    • @davereed6612
      @davereed6612 Před 2 lety +1

      They do. The knipex ergostrip strippers for data cables and coaxial cables. The split, strip and score multi wires and single small communication wires. It’s for CAT5-CAT8 stuff and coax.

    • @wax-ecstatic
      @wax-ecstatic Před 2 lety +1

      @@davereed6612 Bro that's nothing like the forged strippers in this video. The ones like in this video would allow me to cut banana cable, strip awg from 18-24 (if it were low voltage sized strippers) and then crimp down b-connectors (Beanies) with the flat-headed ends on the top.

  • @paedahe4975
    @paedahe4975 Před 2 lety

    👍

  • @marioleon972
    @marioleon972 Před 2 lety

    8-32 bolts cut fail on my knipex My Journeyman told me it is garbage

  • @ayadalaghbar3090
    @ayadalaghbar3090 Před 2 lety

    Haw match is it?
    Price...please

  • @tedmcdonald3377
    @tedmcdonald3377 Před 2 lety

    😎🛠️😎🛠️😎

  • @sumonislam1311
    @sumonislam1311 Před rokem

    price place