I found that the company that makes the tools that Home Depot is selling is Ideal. Ideal makes all kinds of telecom tools. I went to the internet and found a company that sold me a kit. The kit contained the RG6 stripper, which pulls the outer jacket off, exposing the center conductor on the first step, and the rubber, or plastic jacket on the next. The cable can be perfectly ready for the connector in 15 seconds or less. There is a cable wire cutter in the kit. This is important because the jaws are curved. A regular cutter with flat jaws will flatten the cable when it is cut. The flattened end of cable is hard to work with, and will just fustrate you.
The next tool was the compression tool. It is perfect with all that I've used on it so far. I bought PPC and Digicon Quad, and they are very nice. They work with many types of cable because of their design. You can search for PPC EX 6 XL to get the specifications on this connector. I also have some Digicon connectors with an integral O-ring in the threaded end. The PPC company will tell you that they don't make any like that because it is a bad idea. I have had lots of rain and no trouble yet.
Lots of these tools are knock-offs of each other. There are some cheap ones that look like the Ideal tool.
Ideal makes a kit, they put these three tools in an Ideal blue tool bag. They include a set second set of RG6U blades for the stripper (they come with RG6 blades installed), and a jar of 50 PPC connectors to get you started. These are not cheap tools, the bag cost $133 with free shipping from
http://www.wisecomponents.com
I don't think that $133 was a bargain, but I got it all at once and I have a place to keep them all together.
The main thing about how hard it is to work with RG6 and compression connectors is true with everything I do. If you have the correct tools, and good tools, the job is very easy. The difficulty of a job should never be about how hard the connectors are to put on. Focus on how you are hooking it all together, the system ground, the location, if you are installing a motorized FTA system, how plumb your pipe is going to be when the cement hardens. There are so many other things to concentrate on besides how to work with the cable. Good luck. JM