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US1022679A - Pliers for stripping insulation from electric wires. - Google Patents

Pliers for stripping insulation from electric wires. Download PDF

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Publication number
US1022679A
US1022679A US65539811A US1911655398A US1022679A US 1022679 A US1022679 A US 1022679A US 65539811 A US65539811 A US 65539811A US 1911655398 A US1911655398 A US 1911655398A US 1022679 A US1022679 A US 1022679A
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wire
blades
jaws
pliers
cutting
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US65539811A
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Frank P Huston
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02GINSTALLATION OF ELECTRIC CABLES OR LINES, OR OF COMBINED OPTICAL AND ELECTRIC CABLES OR LINES
    • H02G1/00Methods or apparatus specially adapted for installing, maintaining, repairing or dismantling electric cables or lines
    • H02G1/12Methods or apparatus specially adapted for installing, maintaining, repairing or dismantling electric cables or lines for removing insulation or armouring from cables, e.g. from the end thereof
    • H02G1/1202Methods or apparatus specially adapted for installing, maintaining, repairing or dismantling electric cables or lines for removing insulation or armouring from cables, e.g. from the end thereof by cutting and withdrawing insulation
    • H02G1/1204Hand-held tools
    • H02G1/1229Hand-held tools the cutting element making a longitudinal, and a transverse or a helical cut

Definitions

  • the main object of this invention is to provide a tool, in the form of an ordinary pair of pliers, for quickly removing a section of insulation from an insulated wire.
  • a tool in the form of an ordinary pair of pliers, for quickly removing a section of insulation from an insulated wire.
  • it has been the ordinary and usual practice to cut the insulation transversely and to then scrape or tear it from the wire to the extent desired to bare the wire to permit other wire connections to be made thereto. This is an exceedingly tedious task and frequently results in injury to the wire and often causes the wire to break.
  • a further object of the invention is to provide the pliers with means for cutting the insulated wire, and with a scraper blade for scraping the stripped portion of the wire.
  • 1 designates the handle of the pliers; 2 the jaws thereof; and 3 the pivot.
  • the inner faces of the jaws are formed with regisrectangular grooves 4 which are large enough to receive the insu- Each jaw, near the inner end Specification of Letters Patent. Serial No. 511,699. Renewed October 18, 1911-.
  • each of its groove 4 is provided with a transverse 7 narrow groove 5 whose side walls incline inwardly and downwardly so that the groove is slightly narrower at its bottom.
  • Fitting in each of the narrow transverse grooves 5 is a transverse splitting blade 6 the body of said blade being tapered to correspond with the inclination of the side walls of the grooves, and the grooves are slightly smaller than the blades so that said blades may be wedged in the grooves and frictionally held therein.
  • Each blade ' is provided with a cutting edge 7 formed by beveling the blade, as shown in the drawings.
  • Each. blade 6 is provided at its ends with cutting blades 8 which are perpendicular to the body 6 of the blade, and each of said.
  • blades is out out, as at 9, at a point registering with the end of the cutting edge 7, the bottom of the said notches being coincident with the end of the cutting edge 7, as clearly shown in Figs. 3 and 1 of the drawings.
  • the blades 8 fit snugly in recesses formed in the sides of the jaws of the liers so that their outer surfaces are flush with the outer surfaces of said jaws, and they are so disposed that their cutting edges meet when the plier jaws are brought together, as shown in Fig. 1.
  • the blades 8 on one side of the plier jaws are forme with forwardly projecting extensions 10,-
  • said extensions constituting wire cuttlng blades by means of which the insulated wire may be cut, the body of the wire between the jaws lying within the forward portions of the recesses 41.
  • the rear shoulders 11 formed by the slots a constitute a gage by means of which the wire may be centered over the transverse cutting blades 7. It is only necessary to lace the wire in the slots 1 and against the shoulder 1.1 in order to have the wire centered between the knives.
  • I provide a set of blades for each plier, the cutting edges 7 of each set of blades being arranged a diflerent distance from the vertical centers of said blades. This is indicated clearly in Fig. 5 of the drawings.
  • the cutting blades 7* as shown in Fig. 5, are for cutting the largest size of wire that may be handled in a pair of pliers.
  • the cutting edges of the blades are arranged as indicated in dotted lines in said figures, the blades indicated at 7 being adapted for cutting the smallest size of wire.
  • the cutting blades are held in place by the friction so that the loosening of screws or other clamping means is avoided. It will also be noted that to adapt the pliers for'use with difleu cnt sizes of wires it is only necessary to remove the undesired blades and to place the I desired size in the jaws.
  • the insulated wire is placed between the jaws and against the shoulders 11.
  • the jaws are then brought together, the blades 7 splitting the insulation longi tudinally between the blades 8, and the blades 8 cutting the insulation transversely of the wire.
  • the wire will not be cut transversely because of the recesses 9 formed of the blades 8, said recesses being of such size that when the blades are brought together the wire will be received within said recesses.
  • These recesses will, of course, be slightly varied in size and position on the various blades adapted for the diiferent sizes of wire. It will therefore be seen that it is only necessary to provide one set of transverse grooves 5 in the plier jaws, and yet the pliers may be readily adapted for operating on wires of different diameters.
  • One of the blades 8 is formed with a lat eral extension 12 which is provided with a curved cutting edge 13 which serves as a scraper for cleaning the wire after the insulation is removed.
  • One of the jaws 2 is formed with a transverse groove 14 on its outer side which is adapted to register with the scraper blade 13, the said groove being adapted to receive the insulated wire during the scraping operation.
  • I provide a simple tool in the form of a pair of pliers for simultaneously cutting insulation around the wire at separated points and splitting the insulation along the wire between said transverse cuts. I also provide means for scraping the wire after the removal of the insulation. In addition to these features the device is provided with means for cutting the insulated wire and with the usual wire working jaws.
  • a pliers formed with a pair of jaws, each of said jaws being formed with a transverse groove in its inner face, the side I walls of said grooves converging toward the bottom of the grooves, a correspondingly tapered splitting blade adapted to fit each of said grooves and to be wedged therein by pressure applied to the cutting edges of the blades, and cutting blades formed integral with the ends of said splitting blades and arranged perpendicular to said blades to cut the insulation transversely of the wire, each of said cutting blades being formed with a recess to receive the wire.
  • a pliers formed with a pair of jaws, each of said jaws being formed with a transverse groove in its inner face, the side walls of said grooves converging toward the bottoms of the grooves, a correspondingly tapered splitting blade adapted to fit each of said grooves, said blade being slightl and adapted to be wedged therein by pressure applied to the cutting edges of the blades, and cutting blades connected to the ends of the splitting blades, recesses being formed in the sides of the plier jaws to receive said cutting blades, each of said cutting blades being formed with a recess to receive the wire.
  • a pliers formed with a pair of jaws, one of said j aws being formed with a transverse groove in its inner face, the side walls of said groove converging toward the bottom of the groove, a correspondingly tapered splitting blade adapted to fit said groove, said blade adapted to be wedged therein by pressure applied to the cutting edge thereof, and cutting blades connected to the ends of the splitting blade, each of said cutting blades being formed with a recess to receive the wire after the insulation has been cut transversely by the cutting blades.
  • a pliers formed with a one of said jaws being formed verse groove in its inner face, the. side walls of said groove converging toward the bottom of the groove, a correspondingly tapered splitting blade adapted to fit said groove. said blade adapted to be wedged therein by pressure applied to the cutting edge thereof, cutting blades connected to the ends of the splitting blade, each of sa d cutting blades being formed with a recess to receive the wire after the insulation has been out transversely by the cutting blades, and a wirecentering means to center the wire in the grooves in the cutting blades.
  • a pliers formed with a pair of jaws having transverse grooves in their inner faces, a wire centering means to center the wire between said grooves, splitting blades adapted to be wedged in said grooves by pressure applied to their cutting edges, and cutting blades connected to the ends of said pair of jaws, with a transsplitting blades and adapted to cut the insulation transversely of the wire, the jaws of the pliers being formed with recesses to receive said cutting blades.
  • a pliers formed with a pair of jaws having transverse grooves in their inner faces, and having means to serve as a centering device to center the wire, said centering device'being a fixed distance from the groove, and a set of splitting knives adapted to be secured within said grooves, the cutting edges of said knives being arranged at different distances from the longitudinal centers of the grooves, whereby edge thereof, and transverse cutting blades formed integral with the ends of the split-- ting blade, each of said cutting blades being formed with a recess to receive the wire after the insulation has been cut transversely by the cutting blades.
  • said knives may be placed in said grooves and will be adapted to split insulation of wires of different diameters, and the cutting edges of said blades being different distances from the centering device.
  • a pliers formed with a pair of jaws, one of said jaws being formed with a transverse groove in its inner face, the side walls of said groove converging toward the bottom of the groove, a correspondingly tapered splitting blade adapted to fit said groove, said blade adapted to be wedged therein by pressure applied to the cutting ⁇ Vitnesses:

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  • Scissors And Nippers (AREA)

Description

P. P. HUSTON. PLIERS FOR STRIPPING INSULATION FROM ELECTRIC WIRES.
APPLICATION FILED AUG. 7, 1909. RENEWED OCT. 18, 1911. n v
1,022,679. Patented Apr. 9, 1912.
WITNESSES BY r A TTORNEYS- 55 lated wire.
. tering, transverse,
UNITED STATES PATENT QFFTCE.
FRANK 1?. HUSTON, 0F DUMONT, NEW JERSEY.
PL IERS FOR STBIPPING INSULATION FROM ELECTRIC WIRES.
oaaeae. I
Application filed August 7, 1909,
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, FRANK P. T-IUSTON, a citizen of the United States, residing at Dumont, county of Bergen, and State of New Jersey, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Pliers for Stripping Insulation from Electric Wires, of whic the following is a specification, reference being had therein to the accompanying drawings, in which- Figure 1 is a side elevation showing the jaws of the pliers closed; Fig. 2 a side elevation of the plier jaws showing the transverse knives in section and the jaws closed to split the insulation on the wire; Fig. 3 a transverse vertical sectional view on the line IIIIII of Fig. 9.. Fig. 4 a detail perspective view of the two knives detached 3 and Fig. 5 a detail transverse sectional view showing modifications in the form of the two knives.
The main object of this invention is to provide a tool, in the form of an ordinary pair of pliers, for quickly removing a section of insulation from an insulated wire. Heretofore it has been the ordinary and usual practice to cut the insulation transversely and to then scrape or tear it from the wire to the extent desired to bare the wire to permit other wire connections to be made thereto. This is an exceedingly tedious task and frequently results in injury to the wire and often causes the wire to break.
WVith my invention it is only necessary to place the insulated wire between the jaws of the pliers and to then close the jaws on the wire. By this simple operation the insulation is cut transversely at the two ends of the section to be removed and is split longitudinally between the two outs, so that the entire section may be removed, leaving the wire stripped and bare between the two transverse cuts.
A further object of the invention is to provide the pliers with means for cutting the insulated wire, and with a scraper blade for scraping the stripped portion of the wire.
Referring to the various parts by numerals, 1 designates the handle of the pliers; 2 the jaws thereof; and 3 the pivot. At a suitable point forward of the pivot the inner faces of the jaws are formed with regisrectangular grooves 4 which are large enough to receive the insu- Each jaw, near the inner end Specification of Letters Patent. Serial No. 511,699. Renewed October 18, 1911-.
Patented Apr. 9, 1912.
Serial No. 655,398.
of its groove 4 is provided with a transverse 7 narrow groove 5 whose side walls incline inwardly and downwardly so that the groove is slightly narrower at its bottom. Fitting in each of the narrow transverse grooves 5 is a transverse splitting blade 6 the body of said blade being tapered to correspond with the inclination of the side walls of the grooves, and the grooves are slightly smaller than the blades so that said blades may be wedged in the grooves and frictionally held therein. Each blade 'is provided with a cutting edge 7 formed by beveling the blade, as shown in the drawings. Each. blade 6 is provided at its ends with cutting blades 8 which are perpendicular to the body 6 of the blade, and each of said. blades is out out, as at 9, at a point registering with the end of the cutting edge 7, the bottom of the said notches being coincident with the end of the cutting edge 7, as clearly shown in Figs. 3 and 1 of the drawings. The blades 8 fit snugly in recesses formed in the sides of the jaws of the liers so that their outer surfaces are flush with the outer surfaces of said jaws, and they are so disposed that their cutting edges meet when the plier jaws are brought together, as shown in Fig. 1. The blades 8 on one side of the plier jaws are forme with forwardly projecting extensions 10,-
said extensions constituting wire cuttlng blades by means of which the insulated wire may be cut, the body of the wire between the jaws lying within the forward portions of the recesses 41.
The rear shoulders 11 formed by the slots a constitute a gage by means of which the wire may be centered over the transverse cutting blades 7. It is only necessary to lace the wire in the slots 1 and against the shoulder 1.1 in order to have the wire centered between the knives. To adapt the blades for stripping insulation from wire 0 different diameters I provide a set of blades for each plier, the cutting edges 7 of each set of blades being arranged a diflerent distance from the vertical centers of said blades. This is indicated clearly in Fig. 5 of the drawings. The cutting blades 7*, as shown in Fig. 5, are for cutting the largest size of wire that may be handled in a pair of pliers. For smaller sizes of wire the cutting edges of the blades are arranged as indicated in dotted lines in said figures, the blades indicated at 7 being adapted for cutting the smallest size of wire. The cutting blades are held in place by the friction so that the loosening of screws or other clamping means is avoided. It will also be noted that to adapt the pliers for'use with difleu cnt sizes of wires it is only necessary to remove the undesired blades and to place the I desired size in the jaws.
In operation the insulated wire is placed between the jaws and against the shoulders 11. The jaws are then brought together, the blades 7 splitting the insulation longi tudinally between the blades 8, and the blades 8 cutting the insulation transversely of the wire. The wire will not be cut transversely because of the recesses 9 formed of the blades 8, said recesses being of such size that when the blades are brought together the wire will be received within said recesses. These recesses will, of course, be slightly varied in size and position on the various blades adapted for the diiferent sizes of wire. It will therefore be seen that it is only necessary to provide one set of transverse grooves 5 in the plier jaws, and yet the pliers may be readily adapted for operating on wires of different diameters.
One of the blades 8 is formed with a lat eral extension 12 which is provided with a curved cutting edge 13 which serves as a scraper for cleaning the wire after the insulation is removed. One of the jaws 2 is formed with a transverse groove 14 on its outer side which is adapted to register with the scraper blade 13, the said groove being adapted to receive the insulated wire during the scraping operation.
From the foregoing it will be readily seen that I provide a simple tool in the form of a pair of pliers for simultaneously cutting insulation around the wire at separated points and splitting the insulation along the wire between said transverse cuts. I also provide means for scraping the wire after the removal of the insulation. In addition to these features the device is provided with means for cutting the insulated wire and with the usual wire working jaws.
Having thus fully described my invention, what I claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent is 1. A pliers formed with a pair of jaws, each of said jaws being formed with a transverse groove in its inner face, the side I walls of said grooves converging toward the bottom of the grooves, a correspondingly tapered splitting blade adapted to fit each of said grooves and to be wedged therein by pressure applied to the cutting edges of the blades, and cutting blades formed integral with the ends of said splitting blades and arranged perpendicular to said blades to cut the insulation transversely of the wire, each of said cutting blades being formed with a recess to receive the wire.
' larger than the grooves 2. A pliers formed with a pair of jaws, each of said jaws being formed with a transverse groove in its inner face, the side walls of said grooves converging toward the bottoms of the grooves, a correspondingly tapered splitting blade adapted to fit each of said grooves, said blade being slightl and adapted to be wedged therein by pressure applied to the cutting edges of the blades, and cutting blades connected to the ends of the splitting blades, recesses being formed in the sides of the plier jaws to receive said cutting blades, each of said cutting blades being formed with a recess to receive the wire.
3. A pliers formed with a pair of jaws, one of said j aws being formed with a transverse groove in its inner face, the side walls of said groove converging toward the bottom of the groove, a correspondingly tapered splitting blade adapted to fit said groove, said blade adapted to be wedged therein by pressure applied to the cutting edge thereof, and cutting blades connected to the ends of the splitting blade, each of said cutting blades being formed with a recess to receive the wire after the insulation has been cut transversely by the cutting blades.
4. A pliers formed with a one of said jaws being formed verse groove in its inner face, the. side walls of said groove converging toward the bottom of the groove, a correspondingly tapered splitting blade adapted to fit said groove. said blade adapted to be wedged therein by pressure applied to the cutting edge thereof, cutting blades connected to the ends of the splitting blade, each of sa d cutting blades being formed with a recess to receive the wire after the insulation has been out transversely by the cutting blades, and a wirecentering means to center the wire in the grooves in the cutting blades.
5. A pliers formed with a pair of jaws having transverse grooves in their inner faces, a wire centering means to center the wire between said grooves, splitting blades adapted to be wedged in said grooves by pressure applied to their cutting edges, and cutting blades connected to the ends of said pair of jaws, with a transsplitting blades and adapted to cut the insulation transversely of the wire, the jaws of the pliers being formed with recesses to receive said cutting blades.
6. A pliers formed with a pair of jaws having transverse grooves in their inner faces, and having means to serve as a centering device to center the wire, said centering device'being a fixed distance from the groove, and a set of splitting knives adapted to be secured within said grooves, the cutting edges of said knives being arranged at different distances from the longitudinal centers of the grooves, whereby edge thereof, and transverse cutting blades formed integral with the ends of the split-- ting blade, each of said cutting blades being formed with a recess to receive the wire after the insulation has been cut transversely by the cutting blades.
In testimony whereof I hereunto affix my signature in the presence of two witnesses this 6th day of August 1909.
FRANK P. HUSTON.
said knives may be placed in said grooves and will be adapted to split insulation of wires of different diameters, and the cutting edges of said blades being different distances from the centering device.
7. A pliers formed with a pair of jaws, one of said jaws being formed with a transverse groove in its inner face, the side walls of said groove converging toward the bottom of the groove, a correspondingly tapered splitting blade adapted to fit said groove, said blade adapted to be wedged therein by pressure applied to the cutting \Vitnesses:
WM. R. DAVIS, F. R. MILLER.
Copies of this patent may be obtained for five cents each, by addressing the Commissioner of Patents, Washington, D. 0.
US65539811A 1911-10-18 1911-10-18 Pliers for stripping insulation from electric wires. Expired - Lifetime US1022679A (en)

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Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2722145A (en) * 1954-04-29 1955-11-01 Edward J Schulenburg Apparatus for stripping insulation from insulated wire
US2774268A (en) * 1954-04-29 1956-12-18 Lionel Corp Plier-like tools for use with toy railroad track
US2842016A (en) * 1956-09-10 1958-07-08 Kenneth T Miller Cable dressing tool
US2990735A (en) * 1959-01-21 1961-07-04 Champion De Arment Tool Compan Wire cutting pliers with wire stripping notches
US3175429A (en) * 1961-07-20 1965-03-30 Tool Tech Corp Wire stripper
US3198038A (en) * 1961-04-24 1965-08-03 Phillips Petroleum Co Insulation removing tool and method
US3212369A (en) * 1962-12-17 1965-10-19 David G Way Wire stripping devices
US3599514A (en) * 1969-10-15 1971-08-17 Theodore A Fornkahl Insulation removal tool
US3696509A (en) * 1970-09-10 1972-10-10 Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co Dies for cutting electrical cable
US5085114A (en) * 1990-09-04 1992-02-04 Molex Incorporated Method for facilitating removal of insulation from wires
WO2017120462A1 (en) * 2016-01-07 2017-07-13 Hubbell Incorporated Wire stripping die for crimping tool

Cited By (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2722145A (en) * 1954-04-29 1955-11-01 Edward J Schulenburg Apparatus for stripping insulation from insulated wire
US2774268A (en) * 1954-04-29 1956-12-18 Lionel Corp Plier-like tools for use with toy railroad track
US2842016A (en) * 1956-09-10 1958-07-08 Kenneth T Miller Cable dressing tool
US2990735A (en) * 1959-01-21 1961-07-04 Champion De Arment Tool Compan Wire cutting pliers with wire stripping notches
US3198038A (en) * 1961-04-24 1965-08-03 Phillips Petroleum Co Insulation removing tool and method
US3175429A (en) * 1961-07-20 1965-03-30 Tool Tech Corp Wire stripper
US3212369A (en) * 1962-12-17 1965-10-19 David G Way Wire stripping devices
US3599514A (en) * 1969-10-15 1971-08-17 Theodore A Fornkahl Insulation removal tool
US3696509A (en) * 1970-09-10 1972-10-10 Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co Dies for cutting electrical cable
US5085114A (en) * 1990-09-04 1992-02-04 Molex Incorporated Method for facilitating removal of insulation from wires
WO2017120462A1 (en) * 2016-01-07 2017-07-13 Hubbell Incorporated Wire stripping die for crimping tool
US10554006B2 (en) 2016-01-07 2020-02-04 Hubbell Incorporated Wire stripping die for crimping tool
US11569626B2 (en) 2016-01-07 2023-01-31 Hubbell Incorporated Wire stripping die for crimping tool

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