🔌 Elevate Your Cable Game with CABLELAYING Socks!
The CABLELAYING9-12MM Cable Pulling Socks are engineered for professionals, offering a robust 700lbs pulling force and a lightweight design. Made from durable galvanized steel, these socks feature an eye mesh design for enhanced grip and protection, making them ideal for various cable laying applications.
Manufacturer | CABLELAYING |
Item Weight | 0.317 ounces |
Product Dimensions | 0.79 x 2.28 x 9.61 inches |
Size | 9-12MM RED |
Color | 9-12MM RED |
Material | Stainless Steel |
Batteries Included? | No |
Batteries Required? | No |
N**S
A Good Value!
We used these to pull 4ga wires over 300 feet. Worked great! Good quality.
T**U
Works well, nice price
No complaint whatsoever. Used these to pull THHN cable through 40' runs of liquid tight flex cable.
L**7
Product works fine for pulling small wires
This product works fine for pulling small wires, but for an application where you need to pull wires through a tight path it’s not strong enough to handle that.
G**G
Perfect accessory
These things made my job a millions times easier. I had to pull fiber optic cable through over 100 ft of conduit. Fiber optic is very sensitive to bending or tip damage. Using a normal fish tape if you were to try to connect it like normal wire it would damage the fiber optic. The way that this slips over the casing and grabs it and pulls the line dead straight is ideal for things like fiber optic. I'm sure it would work great for other things like Romex or cable TV line. Quick, easy connection and has a reinforced loop to slip over the end of the fish tape. For the cost of it it is really worth the money. I had the fiber optic company come out and it was the first time they had seen it or used it and they thought it was great because it made their jobs so much easier and quicker
D**N
Worth the money, no more making heads!
These are awesome for the price. I'm doing a lot of home run and branch pulls for a commercial building, mostly 10 and some 12. Our amazing Foreman had guys running 3/4" EMT for 10 #10s, which is max pipe fill. On one pull we snapped two heads (made with crossing two #10 solid opposite directions through mule tape). Pulled so hard we broke the copper with the mule tape (it didn't "fall apart") and had connectors coming through the J box (6 guys pulling). For the 3rd try, I put my sock on it and with all 6 guys pulling it had no issues whatsoever. Now I'm using them all the time for the convenience of not having to make heads and use lots of tape, even for short pulls in doing solo. Set up the sock, spools, and Rack a Tiers All American Pull Buddy on one side and I go to the other and pull (with a RopeMatic if its a harder pull)... the apprentices can keep doing other stuff. So convenient and speeds the process just sliding the sock on, tying it to the line, and pulling it off the other side. No more crazy head makeup and stress about them breaking! I will say if you have a lot of conductors, put a wrap around each group of 3 or 4 as a cable in the center could slide out under extreme stress potentially.Well worth the money. Haven't used the largest or very smallest size yet, but I'm sure they would work great too. Some guys think I'm crazy for buying so many specialty tools with my own money, but things like this make life so much easier. No more frustration! My main recommendation would be color code them at the crimp or something, so they're quickly identifiable. The etching with the size marking is already wearing off the main one I use.
F**F
Worked like a charm!
If you ever need to pull wires (I pulled two coax- one with the connector on and a direct burial Cat six on one run with no problems. Used an existing line to pull a fishing tape and the fishing tape to pull the lines with the cable sock. 75 ft run in 1" conduit without issue.
T**I
Pulls THHN well
I've been using these to pull multiple strands of THHN though PVC conduit and they work well. They bite good without damaging, and hold well, to the point of being somewhat difficult to remove after the pull. My last pull was 8 runs of #14 THHN though 20' of 1/2" conduit with 360 degrees of bends, and it pulled without any issue. I have found wrapping the very end of the wires with a few wraps of electrical tape does help to keep them bundled when putting the puller on and to keep the tips of the cables from poking through the mesh while pulling, but that's all that's needed.Much, much easier than trying to tape a wire bundle to a fish tape and pull that way.
H**R
Really works.
I had to pull a tight bunch of cables through 100' of PVC pipe and was worried that it might slip off or I would drop a couple of wires. Nope, it grabbed the bundle perfectly. Added bonus, it was real easy to remove.
ترست بايلوت
منذ 3 أسابيع
منذ أسبوع