

All About CCC

Dr. Dimitri Stein (1920 - 2018) founded Cable Consultants Corporation (CCC) in 1962 and, for nearly half a century, the company has provided North American manufacturing firms with important access to European technical development, primarily in electric cable technology.
Dr. Stein forged strong ties with customers by providing the best of western European manufacturing technology, while offering solutions that were specific to a client's needs. As a result, CCC has retained many of its customers for 15 years or more.
Dr. Stein, an electrical engineering graduate of Berlin Technical University, recognized in the early 1950's that there was a need for an exchange of technical ideas between Europe and America. Thanks to his vision, he has participated in or led several developments which have not only been widely adopted in the American cable industry, but have also received patent coverage.
One of these developments involved a proprietary cable construction which replaced the conventional lead or composite metal-plastic sheath with a thin, impervious welded and corrugated metallic envelope, known as the "Wellmantel". This process is still being used today by a major U.S. cable manufacturer that produces a premium line of power cable. The process was licensed by CCC to practically all major American and Canadian cable companies and the specialized equipment it required was supplied and installed with the support of CCC.
​​​In the high-frequency field, Dr. Stein initiated a revolutionary cable design which is still dominant today.
The company continues to identify new applications for the core technologies and machinery that it represents. In addition, CCC serves a broad range of industries including telecommunications, power distribution, welding wire, steel rope, medical devices and compressed gas transport.
Most importantly, CCC is recognized as an industry leader that offers unique solutions to its clients. Typical of this is the recent application of the "Wellmantel" process to the manufacturing of medical syringes in order to ensure the continuous, zero-defect production of cannula.