I bought a lot of belden 8214. It says "RG8" but it turns out it's actually sized like LMR400. The RG8-sized connectors I bought don't fit over the center conductor. My bad -- I should have read the actual physical dimensions before buying connectors.
My first go at stripping any coax, ever. UGH. I bought an expensive tool ($60 or so) with adjustable blades. It is the kind you put your finger through and spin. I went through multiple feet of cable and multiple hours and couldn't get a clean cut. Then I started getting a clean cut every 5,6,7,8,something attempts. Way too unreliable. I eventually had an a-ha moment when I noticed that the center conductor is alternately wound in opposite directions (CW then CCW). See photo.
When I was cutting on the CCW wound section, which I suppose was most of the time, the dielectric would pull away during the cut. The necessary pressure of the tool would force the dielectric against the center, forcing it to follow the winding and pull itself off. Even light hand rotation with no radial pressure does this -- there is no way at all to rotate a cut piece of dielectric and have it stay in place axially. The dielectric is too tightly bound to the conductor. So whenever I cut on a CCW section, the dielectric would pull away and the tool, having pressure against the jacket, would pull away with it, ruining the cut.
But if I happened to cut on the CW section, I finally would get a clean cut. Rotating the dielectric on this section of the conductor results in the dielectric pulling itself back
onto the wire, thereby staying in place, and resulting in a clean cut. See photo. (ignore that it's not a proper 3 level cut.)
I then vise gripped the hanging end so it couldn't rotate off and got a clean cut, since there's no way I'd reliably find or cut only on the CW wound sections.
Nowhere on the interwebs is anyone talking about the difficulty of stripping stranded coax!
I've tried keeping axial pressure away from the loose end while turning, but it's not reliable.
The proper way would be to secure the ends (past the blade)
only and then have a freely rotating blade make the cuts. The handheld finger loop tools aren't able to work like this. I imagine this is more like how a CNC type machine would do the cut.
I've now found the TMW LMR400 tool, and a tool from DX Engineering. The DXE tool gives a full stop to the cable end at a specific recommended length for a specific connector. The dielectric is thereby not able to move itself off the end of the cable during the cut operation. The TMW tool I'm not sure about. It appears to peel the insulation away as it cuts, in 2 steps, only making a 2 level cut. And of course, actual LMR400 has a solid conductor and shouldn't have the side effect of the dielectric rotating itself off.
It will be a week before I get the DXE tool. Any comments on its effectiveness for this type of cable? I hate to wait a week, find it ineffective, and then spend more time looking elsewhere. I feel like I've exhausted google on this one.