product question

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Charlie Bob

Senior Member
Location
West Tennessee
Does anybody own a pair of Klein ratchet cable cutters?
The one i'm after is 63600. The one that can cut up to 600 MCM copper.
My question is whats the smallest you can use it for?
I guess all of them will cut 2/0 and smaller too,right?
 

Charlie Bob

Senior Member
Location
West Tennessee
well i've been using sawzall blades, but i tell you it's not easy when you have a sawzall going crazy right there next to your fingers. I always have to hold the cable when i cut it in the service box. and besides the sawzall weights a ton with one hand.
I'm a firm believer in the frase: " you're just as good as your tools are".:)
 

Charlie Bob

Senior Member
Location
West Tennessee
Got it!:grin:

George, I got Two Electric Sawzall ( a ridgid, a dewalt), and a Cordless Dewalt too. And for small cuts and such i got a Rotozip.
I hate to spend that much money on another cutting tool..
THanks any way.
 

hillbilly1

Senior Member
Location
North Georgia mountains
Occupation
Owner/electrical contractor
They are nice to use in meter bases, where you don't have a lot of room to work in, but they are pricey. The first one I had, the ratchet broke a tooth out cutting 500 Kcmil (you better have a strong grip too). The second one my helper cut ACSR and put a nice gap in the the blade.
 

growler

Senior Member
Location
Atlanta,GA
I can't imagine spending $250 for a pair of ratchet cutters. How much is a sawzall blade, you know?


If you don't cut a lot of the big copper cable you don't need to spend that much. I have the Klien 63060 and they are only listed for 600 Al. but I have cut 750 with no problem.

It really depends on how much you will need to use them for big cables.

The ratchet cutters are much better to use than a sawzall. You just don't know how much you love those things until you have had a set for years. It's money well spent.
 

nakulak

Senior Member
I keep the ratchet cutters in my glove box. they come in handy when doing a bunch of buckets, and it makes alum go quick an easy, when a sawzall would make a mess of it and also a pain if your wires are barely fitting in the lugs. also saves your knuckles from the old fashion cutters when your in tight spots. well worth the money.
 

ohmhead

Senior Member
Location
ORLANDO FLA
Well i kinda use these!!
http://i611.photobucket.com/albums/tt195/stringking/CRCC1.jpg

If you do commercial work and lots of gear you better have that tool .
The sawzall is for cutting gutters, kindroff and large pvc pipe doing underground work the band saw is for pipe like 2 inch Emt ,Rigid , IMC or larger conduit .

If you want to make money time and labor buy the correct tools for the job if you want too waste time and money use a saw to cut wire .

Our company has the electric cable cutters also there great when you have multiple parallel feeder conductors .


When you work MV or high voltage you dont cut any cable with a saw of any kind metal flakes & frags can make your splice or load break connection fail testing or could blow it out carbon tracking kinda . we dont even use a metal tape measure when we splice cable for the same reason . I use the old wood stick ruler when i measure and make up HV cables . I was trained by a old timer and we never had a splice fail ever .
 
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George Stolz

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Windsor, CO NEC: 2017
Occupation
Service Manager
...they are pricey. The first one I had, the ratchet broke a tooth out cutting 500 Kcmil (you better have a strong grip too). The second one my helper cut ACSR and put a nice gap in the the blade.
1. Pricey
2. The teeth break
3. The blade can get nicked

I'd venture to say that half the ratchet cutters I've seen in the field are missing a tooth or have an irritating nick in the blade. I wouldn't go so far as to say it's a mistake to buy a set, but I stand by my practice of using a sawzall. Why carry two tools that do the same job (assuming you're not doing something weird like MV, of course, I can't speak to that end.)

Then again, I don't spend weeks on end cutting large cables and large conductors; typically, it's one or two days a month or less.

JMO,
 

ohmhead

Senior Member
Location
ORLANDO FLA
Well George i dont buy my company does that the best point i can make .

But if we buy our own tools and they break my company will repair or replace tool thats batt power or cutting types like cable cutters or batt drills or KO cutters nice of them .

One rule never loan my tools out ever if helper needs a tool he better have them or he goes to the house that day this rule keeps tools in good shape.

And you always have it when you need it .
 
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