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7.75" Milwaukee Combination Electricians 6-in-1 Wire Strippers Pliers Expired

$14.95
$24.97
& More + Free Shipping
+114 Deal Score
83,845 Views
Update: This popular deal is still available.

Home Depot has 7.75" Milwaukee Combination Electricians 6-in-1 Wire Strippers Pliers (48-22-3079) for $14.97. Shipping is free or choose curbside pickup where stock permits.

Thanks to Community Member Analog for finding this deal.

Home Depot also has 7.75" Milwaukee Combination Electricians 6-in-1 Wire Strippers Pliers + 2 Fastback Utility Knives for $29.97. Shipping is free or choose curbside pickup where stock permits.
  • Note, pickup availability will vary by location.
Product Features:
  • Reaming head design - smooths edges of metal pipe from 1/2 in. to 1 in.
  • Bolt cutter - thread and cut #6 and # 8 bolts to preferred length
  • Wire stripper - strips 8 AWG to 18 AWG (solid wire), 10 AWG to 20 AWG (stranded wire)
  • 1-handed swing lock - easy 1-handed use and remains locked while in pouch, spring loaded for easy opening
  • Curved cutting blade for clean cuts through larger wire sizes
  • Rust protection - increases tool life by reducing corrosion
  • Forged alloy steel - for maximum tool strength and durability
  • Tether-ready handle loops
Good Deal?

Original Post

Written by
Edited July 21, 2022 at 11:58 AM by
Pliers Only $14.97:

https://www.homedepot.com/p/Milwa.../202966263

Pliers and 2-pack utility knives $29.97

https://www.homedepot.com/p/Milwa.../314339285

No savings in the combination, as the 2-pack utility knives are $15
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Deal
Score
+114
83,845 Views
$14.95
$24.97

Price Intelligence

Model: Milwaukee 7.75 in. Forged Alloy Steel 6-in-1 Combination Pliers

Deal History 

Sort: Most Recent
Post Date Sold By Sale Price Activity
05/29/23Home Depot$16.95 frontpage
36
08/19/21Home Depot$19.95
3

Current Prices

Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 5/5/2024, 04:11 PM
Sold By Sale Price
Ace Hardware$14.97

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Featured Comments

Those are totally different tools. Klein is thin stamped sheet metal wire stripper, and Milwaukee are real pliers
Klein analog is this: https://www.homedepot.com/p/Klein.../309328454
A few comments mention that the cutting blades are surprisingly soft, just FYI. Good deal for the price and something the lifetime warranty should cover, but these are made in Taiwan/China and not U.S.A. like the Kleins.
I have both of the Klein Tools automatic strippers 11061 and 11063W so I'll give a quick comparison. I'm not sure if Klein Tools made the original version of either or both of these tools or not, but all of the various name brand and no-name automatic strippers in this thread are variations on these two designs.


11063W Katapult (left) and 11061 (right)


They operate using fundamentally different mechanisms.

The $20 Klein Tools 11061 [amazon.com] has two opposing sets of hard plastic serrated jaws that grip the wire to be stripped. You insert the wire from the left. By half-closing the handles, the jaws clamp shut on the wire, automatically adjust so that the left set grips down hard enough to hold both the insulation sheath and the underlying conductor in place, while the right side only grips hard enough to grip the insulation. When you fully close the handles, left jaws hold the wire in place, while the right set of jaws pulls to the right, stretching and tearing the insulation from the underlying conductor.



In theory, this tool is awesome, because it is truly automatic. But in practice, it doesn't work very well, to the point I rarely use it anymore. There is a set-wheel to adjust the tension that is very finicky, and it doesn't produce consistent length strips. It sometimes just tears the whole wire apart, and there are plenty applications where you are modifying something and don't have enough extra wire to afford multiple cuts and strips. But worst of all, it sometimes grips a little too hard on the right and pulls both the insulation and the conductor, deforming the conductor, before the insulation is stripped away. If you weren't paying close attention you might not notice when you damage the conductor, which could be dangerous.
Also, the cutting blade in between the handles is poor quality, soft and totally deformed after not much use.

The $30 model you link is the Klein Tools 11063W [amazon.com] "Katapult" and I love them.

They have a single set of gripping jaws on the left that hold the wire in place. On the right, there is a series of cutting blades akin to a standard wire-stripper sized from 8-22AWG. You line the wire up in the appropriate position based on the gauge of your conductor, and gripping the handles closes the jaws and blade down on the wire and draws the blade to the right, cleanly cutting the insulation sheath off.



It does take a bit more attention than the other style, because you have to visually line the wire you're stripping up with the appropriate notch in the cutting blade, but it is very consistent in stripping exactly the length of insulation you intend, because the cut always happens exactly where you set the wire on the blade. Unlike the other one though, you do need to know the gauge of whatever you are stripping. They are great for stripping Romex. The cutting hole between the handles is sharp and stays sharp. It's a bit annoying that they can't really be stored in a closed position in my tool bag, but otherwise no complaints.

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Joined Feb 2021
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> bubble2 1 Posts
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simpl3user
06-23-2022 at 12:20 PM.
06-23-2022 at 12:20 PM.
Quote from graymen2 :
In general, does anyone have a recommendation on a good wire stripper for electronics? I have some old wire strippers, but typically just use a scissor as it's usually faster.

Klein K12035 for your Go To Set that can handle 28awg and smaller for low voltage wire projects through 00awg in Car Audio and they are the best I've ever used for a home Wiring solid Copper a wire. 14awg is like a hot knife through butter. 10Awg solid copper takes some effort to cut through 10/2 Romex. My personal set is over a year old and have days and hours worth of use. Still going strong. I hate that I am making a TOOL TIME reference but these are meant for Tim Allen, Al his assistant may use a non-industrial pair of these which are also available in the ladies section. Ha
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Joined Dec 2021
L1: Learner
> bubble2 18 Posts
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ScarletCircle978
06-26-2022 at 08:45 AM.
06-26-2022 at 08:45 AM.
only good milwaukee handtools are the utility knives.
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Last edited by ScarletCircle978 June 26, 2022 at 08:51 AM.
Joined Dec 2021
L1: Learner
> bubble2 18 Posts
10 Reputation
ScarletCircle978
06-26-2022 at 08:49 AM.
06-26-2022 at 08:49 AM.
Quote from fade2black2007 :
You miss all the electricians and engineers that said they use these daily?

You wear a helmet in your moms car don't you?

I'm an electrician and these are shit, milwaukees handtools all are.

The one I had didn't strip very well and the tip eventually snapped off with normal use. They just don't feel good to use compared to southwire, klien, knipex. These are what the apprentices buy not knowing any better.
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Joined Mar 2005
L6: Expert
> bubble2 1,333 Posts
370 Reputation
graymen2
08-04-2022 at 01:38 PM.
08-04-2022 at 01:38 PM.
Quote from look30 :
Got this one and never looked back :

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000IYTCG6
Thank you for the recommendation. Just got this ($14) and it's a pretty nice upgrade from using my scissors.
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