Universal Wire Twisting Tool Cable Wire Stripper and Twister Wire Stripping Tool for Electrician by Drill Driver or Manually (Brown)







Key features
- •Quality Material: The wire twisting tool is made of high quality steel not easily broken; Good performance even under the harsh condition, not afraid of collision and can service for years.
- •Improve Work Efficiency: The cable twisting tool could twist and wrap the wire at the same time; It can highly improve your work efficiency, prevent hurting fingers and relieve fatigue.
- •Easy to Use: The cable twister could work with electric drills or by hand, you could choose the way needed to twist the wires.
- •Portable Twisting Tool: The wire stripper tool is small only 3.54inch in length, 0.22lb in weight, which is quite easy for carrying and storage.
- •After-sales service: If you have any questions on our wire twister, please feel free to contact us. We will response within 24 hours.
Universal Wire Twisting Tool Cable Wire Stripper and Twister Wire Stripping Tool for Electrician by Drill Driver or Manually (Brown)
List Price: $15.50$13.95DEALYou Save: $1.55 (10%)
Free shippingFree Returns – 30 daysFree Order CancellationSecure Payment2–3 Days DeliveryGet It June 23, 2026In Stock (1)No marketing spamNo account requiredFulfilment by FedEx / Amazon / UPS / ShipwirePayPal / Card Buyer Protection
Customer Reviews
Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers3.7
out of 5
Based on 2 reviews
5★
50%
4★
50%
3★
0%
2★
0%
1★
0%
Looks great in theory
Robert Shaw✓ Verified Purchase•June 26, 2023
I think it would be a great tool for wrapping wires, and I wish I had used it for the project I purchased it for. Unfortunately, I didn't.
Interesting idea for a tool
Greg C✓ Verified Purchase•May 22, 2023
I tried this out on some solid 14awg copper. It took two attempts to get a good join. The key seems to be going fairly slow with the drill. I went a little fast on first attempt and the insulator only got removed from one of the wires, and even then only after several turns of insulated wire. Also helpful is a broad set of linesman pliers to hold the wires steady -- you don't want the wires wiggling around at all when you start the drill. In fact, something where the jaws close in a perfectly parallel fashion like you might get with channel locks. Some of the promotional pictures shows a bunch of 1-in 2+out splice and I'm not sure how they did that, or if it's even possible with this tool. It really just seems like an alternative to the standard wirenut. Of course, after joining the cables, you still need to insulate the connection with something! Overall this is a really neat idea, I'm just not convinced it's practical. It would really unpleasant if you mess up a joint and didn't have enough slack left to try again.







