The Nuances of Nut Tools


Nut Tool Review | Best-in-Class

Search
Go
Overview
We took seven of the best nut tools and tested them at cleaning a variety of cams and nut types in all sizes and over a broad spectrum of rock types. We compared their weight, durability, ability to clean a nut, ability to clean a cam, the comfort level while pounding on the nut tool with our hand, how nicely they ride on a harness and each tool's overall value. – Ian Nicholson

  • Top Picks
  • Review Photos
  • All Tested Products
Demonstrating the differences in how nut tools might hang off your har...
Demonstrating the differences in how nut tools might hang off your harness as far as length is concerned. From Right to left, The BD Nut tool, DMM Nutter, Metolius Free Nut, Metolius Extractor, Omega Pacific Caranut, Ushba Titanium nut tool, Wild Country
Credit: Ian Nicholson

Side by side comparison for Nut tools in this review. From Top to bott...
Side by side comparison for Nut tools in this review. From Top to bottom Omega Pacific Caranut, Wild Country Pro Key, Ushba Titanium Nut tool, DMM Nutter, Metolius Free Nut, Metolius Extractor, and the Black Diamond Nut tool.
Credit: Ian Nicholson

Showing the hooks of the nut tools from Top right to bottom left. BD N...
Showing the hooks of the nut tools from Top right to bottom left. BD Nut tool, DMM Nutter, Metolius Extractor, Metolius Free Nut, Wild Country Pro Key, Omega Pacific Caranut, and the Ushba Titanium nut tool. I placed a Petzl Attache and a standard sized p
Credit: Ian Nicholson

DMM Nutter Nut tool retracting a Metolius #7 Ultra light Power cam wit...
DMM Nutter Nut tool retracting a Metolius #7 Ultra light Power cam with its specialized teeth on its tail end.
Credit: Ian Nicholson

 Showing the tops of all the nut tools for side by side comparison. Th...
Showing the tops of all the nut tools for side by side comparison. The wider the surface area then the more comfortable it is to pound your palm against. From Right to left Wild Country Pro Key, Ushba Titanium nut tool, Omega Pacific Caranut, Metolius Ex
Credit: Ian Nicholson

Trying to demonstrate how all the nut tools might hang on your harness...
Trying to demonstrate how all the nut tools might hang on your harness compared with one another. From left to right they are the Black Diamond Nut tool, Omega Pacific Caranut, Metolius Extractor, Metolius Free Nut, Ushba Titanium Nut Tool, Wild Country P
Credit: Ian Nicholson

Cleaning a nut with the SuperTopo Editor's Choice Ushba Titanium Nut T...
Cleaning a nut with the SuperTopo Editor's Choice Ushba Titanium Nut Tool.
Credit: Ian Nicholson

From Right to left, The BD Nut tool, DMM Nutter, Metolius Free Nut, Me...
From Right to left, The BD Nut tool, DMM Nutter, Metolius Free Nut, Metolius Extractor, Omega Pacific Caranut, Ushba Titanium nut tool, Wild Countryrn
Credit: Ian Nicholson

Ian Nicholson testing nut tools with all types of nuts in all types of...
Ian Nicholson testing nut tools with all types of nuts in all types of cracks at the Lower Town wall of Index, Wa
Credit: Tino Villanueva

Ian Nicholson making a fan of nuts tools during testing at the Lower T...
Ian Nicholson making a fan of nuts tools during testing at the Lower Town walls of Index Washington
Credit: Tino Villanueva


SuperTopo Editors' Hands-on Review

Weight
The Ushba Titanium nut tool was the lightest at 41 grams. Coming in close behind, at first glance, were the BD nut tool and the DMM Nutter at 48 grams each. However, neither one has the built-in carabiner that the Ushba offers so you have to add the weight of a carabiner dedicated to carrying the tool on your harness. Thus the carabiner plus the nut tool is the actual overall weight. The true runner up is the Omega Pacific Caranut at 54 grams. It is heavier but significantly less expensive (11 grams more and $14 less, making the Caranut an option for weight watching dirt bags).

Ability to Clean Nuts
All of these tools worked well cleaning nuts. The noticeable difference was was in smaller cracks. The two Metolius tools, with their thinner profile heads and slightly shorter hooks, could get into some of the smallest fissures to probe out seemingly fixed wires. Both the Extractor and the Free Nut share this smaller profile, making them the best at excavating even the most immovable small stoppers. Our runners up were the WC Pro Key and the Ushba Titanium, doing well in the cracks but not quite up to the two Metolius tools.

Ability to Clean Cams
When trying to retrieve a cam that has walked in too deep to reach with your fingers, nut tools with more curve did slightly better. The exception is the DMM Nutter, which has two teeth on its tail designed to fish out buried cams by hooking onto SLCD’s trigger in two places. These teeth worked on most brands of cams. Most of the other tools did fairly well fishing out cams, sometimes with the assistance of a nut to help retract the trigger.

Comfort
We measured how well we could hammer our palm on the nut tool without fear of tearing our hand to shreds. Best were the WC Pro Key and the Ushba Titanium nut tool. They each had by far the largest area for beating with your hand, which translated to the least pain. The Metolius Free Nut finished not far behind in third place.

Tangle Factor
Here is where we measured how badly a tool gets tangled in everything it is not supposed to. The Metolius was the least trouble due to being shorter in length as well as having the lowest profile hook. The Ushba, while scoring extremely well in every other category, got tangled the most because of its long length and large sharp hook.

Ease of Handling
This is possibly the crux of this review. We tested all the tools on how nicely they came on and off our harness, how easily they poked out a nut while holding the nut tool, not pounding the tail end with with our palm. We gave higher points to built-in carabiners and ease of clipping onto gear loops. The Metolius has a small carabiner that was low profile but it made removal from our gear loops slightly more difficult. The Ushba and the Omega came on and off our harnesses the nicest. The Wild Country Pro Key rode along well and had a built-in spring leash. This never seemed to be a bother and kept us from accidentally dropping it. The Ushba Titanium has finger hole protectors that kept our fingers from getting scraped up.

Over All Value
The overall best value was the Wild Country Pro Key for only $14.95. It has the largest area to pound on with your hand. It comes with a spring leash and while most people find this pretty useful, if you find it dorky it is easily removed. The Wild Country has a relatively low profile head (second only to the Metolius tools) for freeing micro stoppers and it hangs toward the front of the pack for cam removal.

Bottom Line
Many nut tools preformed similarly in many categories and it was hard to pick a runaway winner. All of the tools we tested cleaned most nuts and cams fairly well. Standouts in the thin crack category were the two Metolius tools. But our Editors' Choice award goes to the Ushba Titanium nut tool. It was tied for first as the most comfortable, was in the top tier for cleaning nuts and cams and was the lightest overall plus having a built-in carabiner. Its only drawback was its tendency to catch on the rest of our rack. A close second at $11 less was the Wild Country Pro Key. It was just as comfy and cleaned nuts better than the the Ushba. Its spring leash was a nice bonus, and all that comes for less than the park entrance fee at Yosemite.

The Best Tool for Specific Applications
 For Alpine climbing where weight is at a premium, the Ushba is hard to beat. If the Ushba is more than you want to spend and are wearing gloves most of the time, look for nut tools without the extra metal "pad," saving both weight and cost.
 If you are climbing longer routes, the Wild Country Pro Key is a nice choice for its comfort in palm pounding and its removable spring leash.
 For aid climbing or climbing in areas with an abundance of small cracks (think Eldorado Canyon), then either of the Metolius tools is a good bet.
 For climbing a lot of routes where you are bringing a hammer and intending to beat the living piss out of your nut tool, then the Black Diamond nut tool with its chromoly steel body is best.
 If you have big hands, then look toward the Caranut and the Ushba.
 When climbing in less traveled areas where you need a knife to replace webbing and cordage at rap anchors, the Trango Shark is a great option.

Review by: Ian Nicholson Last Updated: March 12, 2010
Ratings Summary
  • Get the complete nut tool rating results summary. We tested 8 nut tools which have received a total of 23 reviews (including our own) for an average score of 3.9 out of 5. Learn how we rated all the products, and how customer-reviews stack up...
Buying Advice
How we Test
Comments
Want to comment on this best-in-class review?
Sign-in or Join SuperTopo and start talking!
Scared Silly

Trad climber
UT
  Dec 1, 2009 - 02:45pm PT
Nice review, unfortunately IMHO most nut tools make today suck. Lowe used to make what they called the "Chock Tocker" which had a small hammer head. It fit perfectly into your hand, was rounded so you could thump it to remove those stubbornly stuck nuts, or worst case hammer on the suckers til they moved (or became stuck for eternity). The hammer was beefy enough for pounding pins. It only draw back is that it was a bit heavy.
Hummerchine

Trad climber
East Wenatchee, WA
  Dec 1, 2009 - 08:51pm PT
I am a known gear slut, love gear, buy and test everything that looks good. The original Leeper nut tool, the smaller one, was actually pretty sweet...but no longer available. The original Ushba is my overall favorite; super light, comfortable curve to pound your hand against, perfect size and thickness to tip. The second generation has the built-in snap link, but is overall heavier, not quite as stiff and burly, and the tip is thicker. Last I checked, neither is being manufactured any longer, but I think you can still find the second generation. The Metolius is nice, and I'm a Metolius fan, but it's overbuilt and too heavy. The BD is simply too thick at the tip for small nuts; hard to imagine how they screwed that up so bad, especially since they remembered a bottle opener. The Wild Country is pretty much ideal, but still heavier than the original Ushba. All they have to do is drill more holes in it; a machine shop could do that for you. So for now I use the original Ushba; if I lose it, even though I also have a second gen Ushba, I'm switching to the Wild Country...after a trip to a machine shop! Oh, the "leash" is overkill and useless for me...
Vulla

climber
  Dec 2, 2009 - 12:08am PT
For something as seemingly simple as a nut tool there is a lot to think about. I have concur with the comments in this review. The BD nut tool sucks to pound on. I have succumbed to hitting the butt of the BD tool with a big cam to get a stuck nut to move - sacrificing a cam for a nut? not ideal. Something with a greater surface area is ideal. The Metolius Freenut, the Wild Country and the Ushba nut tools therefore top my list. The Freenut is a nice standby with a built in biner. The Wild Country pro key is basically the same thing with a built in leash. And the Ushba is the super sexy, top of the line, light and fast alpine style, made from former soviet union submarines, nut tool of choice.
chris v

climber
  Dec 2, 2009 - 07:37pm PT
I, too, have always loved the Leeper nut tools. I got mine from the Yosemite Mountain shop in '95 (it had probably been on the shelf for 10 years up to that point) and used it up until two weeks ago when my partner hucked it off leaning tower. It was small, lightweight, simple. Luckily the mountain shop had a similar Leeper nut tool in stock as a replacement. I like old gear.

If I had to go with a modern nut tool I would go with the Metolius Freenut. I like the wide, but not too wide, pounding surface and built-in biner. The Wild Country Pro Key's leash would probably bother me and the Ushba Titanium nut tool is ridiculously spendy.
ajc

climber
oakland,ca
  Dec 4, 2009 - 12:02am PT
Did you guys not notice that the ushba nut tool can be bent into a U shape without much effort?
No thanks, I'd rather use a flexy butter knife swapped from IHOP than this thing.
Morgan

Trad climber
East Coast
  Dec 4, 2009 - 07:49am PT
I own three nut tools, but none of them were reviewed here, because they are older, I guess.

Chouinard Long Dong
(heavy, but the best for cleaning big stoppers or hexes), can sometimes be used as pro down behind a flake. Not very good for smaller nuts like RPs and HB Offsets.

Leeper 2nd generation
Steel, an excellent hook shape that is generally effective and not too "catchy" has a semi-circle cut out of the blade to help remove buried cams (would only work - maybe - with old-style Friends' and TCUs' trigger bars).

Grivel
A very lightweight nut tool, has several sizes of hex heads die-cut out of the metal in the handle which are lightning holes that can also function as a wrench. I'm not sure if these hex holes are metric or what, but it would be nice for tightening compatible belay bolts. The hook is very good for threading, but can also be a bit catchy and annoying compared to others out there.
jsj

climber
Boulder
  Dec 10, 2009 - 07:42pm PT
I've been looking for an original Ushba Nut Tool (the one without the built in carabiner gate). If anyone has one they no longer need, I'll buy it!

J.

jp80

Mountain climber
Seattle WA
  Dec 24, 2009 - 01:38am PT
I never would have guessed that there is so much to think about when buying a nut tool. I have the Metolius, and I like it pretty well. I'm glad to see that is scored as well as it did. Thanks for taking the time to review something that seems so simple! Hopefully it will help a newer climber.
Cleaning a nut with the SuperTopo Editor's Choice Ushba Titanium Nut T...
Cleaning a nut with the SuperTopo Editor's Choice Ushba Titanium Nut Tool.
Credit: Ian Nicholson

Cleaning a nut with the SuperTopo Editor's Choice Ushba Titanium Nut Tool.

Credit: Ian Nicholson
Related Gear Reviews
Ushba Titanium Nut Tool
Ushba Titanium Nut Tool
$35
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Wild Country Pro Key  Nut Tool
Wild Country Pro Key Nut Tool
$15
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Metolius Freenut
Metolius Freenut
$20
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Video video review
Omega Caranut
Omega Caranut
$12
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Metolius Extractor Nut Tool
Metolius Extractor Nut Tool
$17
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Black Diamond Nut Tool
Black Diamond Nut Tool
$10
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Trango Shark Nut Tool
Trango Shark Nut Tool
$25
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
DMM Nutter
DMM Nutter
$10
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Helpful Buying Tips
Nut Tool Buying Advice - Click for details
 Nut Tool Buying Advice

by Ian Nicholson