H02G1/1226

CABLE STRIPPER HAVING AN ADJUSTABLE BUSHING
20170040783 · 2017-02-09 ·

A cable stripper is provided which has an adjustable bushing which can be adjusted to accept a variety of differently size cables. The cable stripper is rotated around the cable to strip the insulation from a cable. The cable stripper can be attached to an existing tool to impact rotation of the cable stripper around the cable. The cable stripper includes a bushing having an axial passageway and a plurality of spaced slots which are in communication with the passageway, a plurality of cable retention blocks attached to the bushing, and a blade member mounted on the bushing, the blade member being seated within the passageway. The cable retention blocks are moveable relative to the bushing to pass through the slots and into the passageway to engage the cable mounted within the passageway.

Tool, Machine Tool System, and Method of Operating the Tool
20250141197 · 2025-05-01 ·

A tool for stripping a cable, with a cutting unit for cutting a sheath of the cable, with an alignment unit for aligning the cable for a cutting operation using the cutting unit and with a base body unit on which the alignment unit and the cutting unit are arranged. The alignment unit is configured to be adjustable to accommodate different cable diameters.

Powered wire skinner
12555986 · 2026-02-17 ·

A powered wire skinner is configured with a skinner assembly that circumferentially attaches to a wire and a drive assembly that engages with a gear on the skinner to cause a portion of the skinner to rotate about the wire while cutting its exterior skin. The drive includes a drive shaft that engages with an electric drill's chuck. The rotation of the electric drill at the drive shaft translates to the rotational movement of the skinner assembly, thereby cutting the wire's skin to ultimately remove a portion of the wire's skin and expose the wire's metallic portion. The skinner's blade is spring-loaded to cause downward pressure against any surface that engages with the wire, namely the wire's skin. Thus, the rotational movement initiated by the power drill causes the spring-loaded blade to cut the skin and ultimately remove a desired portion of it.