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Reviewed in the United States on February 2, 2025
Nothing to say. These are what we need when we need them. Not exactly the best made quality, but will work.
Joshua Kai Mangarin
Reviewed in the United States on January 12, 2025
I abuse the he'll out of this thing and it's kinda holding up. Not the best quality but it has more than payed for itself.
Rozalia
Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2025
Great quality and feels very durable.
Norris B. Heckwine
Reviewed in the United States on September 14, 2024
Bought this to keep in the truck as a tool and a persuader. Light enough to use well and fit well in the truck.
Guy
Reviewed in the United States on October 25, 2024
Does the job of several tools quickly and conveniently
Aerial Photographer
Reviewed in the United States on July 22, 2023
I think this is one of the handiest heavy duty rescue tools. I have one that has about a 36-in handle and it is significantly heavy. This one has many of the similar tools on it but lighter. Price was great and I am keeping it close for emergencies.
MW149
Reviewed in the United States on January 8, 2023
Nice, sturdy, compact, full of features and inexpensive. I've only had it for one day but used it to dismantle a wooden gate with ease. Worked well for prying off the fence slats and pulling the 2X4's apart.
DIYer
Reviewed in the United States on January 29, 2020
These ergonomically designed demolition tools are a must have for your tool collection. They are balanced, and leveraged to greatly increase your relative strength. I broke my Stanley one with sledge hammer blows on taking up an itinerant tile floor and substrate removal (will never use screws again!). May it rest in peace as out gave me 12 years of extreme condition service. They're so useful because of the ergonomics: the hammer part doubles as a handle and pry and the curvature exerts extra leverage on nails and screws without all the wrist contortions of a hammer - you can just step on the hammer end if needed. Saves time over hammer due to much smaller arc to remove them because of extra length. Finally all those features built into the handle are for prying out 2x4s and supports with a twisting action. That pry side also doubles to increase strike force over the hammer head where that portion oversized too much under certain conditions (thinking of knocking out a form here without ruining fresh concrete).It is shown next to a new Stanley one the company sent on a lifetime warranty, which I didn't know at the time of ordering or could not reach them. But for less than $20 the Amazon one is worth it and maybe better for 👩 since much lighter. No need to return as often you may need two to pry. Not sure if the Stanley one is available under a different name since could not find under googling nor at Amazon. But the company still obviously had them. You can see it is superior in all features I've described above, and is longer and heavier...it's a beast at tearing things out. So go ahead and let out your inner angst on that wall! Just make sure you know what's behind it ahead of time.Two weeks out: am finding 2 cons in the usage of this demolition tool: first the strike head is too narrow when trying to pound broken screws/nails which can't pry out back down since designed for wall demol (compared to the Stanley) and the opening to the "down" pry and "up" pry nail pulls are too narrow for what most users would be needing to pry out (smaller screws and nails removable with more conventional tools). Stanley wins heads down there. But the casting was easy to enlarge with a Dremel tool and cutoff wheel (on its side).
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