Mason
Comentado en Canadá el 4 de septiembre de 2016
Great tool, I've used it both in general use and for offroading a bit, prying out branches and such. Solidly built and great for the money.
Joseph Carter
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 28 de octubre de 2014
When I first opened the box from Amazon, the package I received looked way more like a spice rack than a pry bar. Because it WAS a spice rack, mis-labeled. I really have to wonder how that mistake got made in the warehouse. :D A couple of short days later, complete with cross-shipping, I had the appropriate item in my hands and Amazon had one spice rack on the way back.I bought this item to replace a similarly sized, similarly weighted, but significantly less useful basic pry bar in my NET toolkit. NET is what my city calls its CitizenCorps CERT program, and it's one of the best-utilized CERT programs I've ever encountered. The primary way these things get used by us in the event of an earthquake is to pry doors open or break glass or other things that are generally needed to get people out of damaged buildings. Stuff that will get you arrested if you do it any other time than after an earthquake. ;) Also, a pry bar of this size can be used to move heavy debris just enough to wedge in a pole or other, larger lever as the first step in the slow process of extracting someone pinned under something big and generally uncomfortable.How does it work? Well, thankfully I haven't had any actual earthquakes in which to test it under real world conditions yet, and I don't fancy being arrested, so I'll have to settle for more mundane tasks like dismantling a shed and pulling the nails so the wood can be reclaimed. For those tasks, the product performs excellently and makes short work of the job.