wire stripping

  • Klein Tools 11048: My Go-To Wire Stripper Review

    After fifteen years turning wrenches in attics and crawl spaces, I’ve learned that your wire stripper either earns its spot in your pouch or it doesn’t. The Klein Tools 11048 has been riding on my belt for three years now, and it’s not going anywhere.

    This thing strips 10-18 AWG solid wire clean every single time—no nicks, no do-overs. I’ve used it on countless thermostat installs, control board replacements, and low-voltage runs. The cutting edges still bite through copper like day one, and the grip hasn’t gone sloppy despite being dropped off more ladders than I’d like to admit.

    Made in USA means something when you’re working in 120-degree attic temps and can’t afford tool failures. It’s not the cheapest stripper out there, but it’s the last one you’ll buy.

  • Klein 11061 Wire Stripper: My Honest Field Test

    I’ve been running the Klein 11061 self-adjusting stripper for three months now, and it’s earned a permanent spot in my tool bag. After stripping countless thermostat wires and Romex runs in cramped attics and tight mechanical rooms, this thing just works. The self-adjusting mechanism actually lives up to the hype—no more fumbling with different gauge settings when you’re wedged behind a furnace. It handles 18-gauge thermostat wire as cleanly as 12/2 Romex, which matters when you’re doing control wiring one minute and power the next. The cuts are clean, the grip doesn’t slip when your hands are sweaty, and it’s taken some serious abuse without failing. At this price point, it’s not a gamble—it’s a solid investment that’ll pay for itself in time saved alone.