My son needed a new fishing glove and this made the chopping process a lot easier. Worth buying, I'll be sure to use it for new gloves in the future. Works very well, comes in the bag.
Nice. Slightly heavier than the Rawlings I have which is good. Good solid feeling for him. Works great for forming a pocket in a glove. The only drawback: the grip is very slippery. Add duct tape.
This is my third glove breaker in so many months another company had a solid wood ball drilled and glued onto a dowel, both sucked and both broke in less than two weeks. It's a solid piece and should be able to put many miles on it.
In the past I've made my own hammers (mini bats with balls glued to the end) but as an adult I can afford that little luxury. . I like its shape as it really helps roll some gaps. Don't be afraid to ruin your glove.
I used to use a rubber mallet to smack my ball gloves but decided to try one of these as it's rounder. It does a good job and appears to be very well made. Seems a bit expensive. A rubber mallet costs about $12 and does about the same job.
Perfect size and works as advertised! For the money, this is the best way to crack the gauntlet. YouTube Mr. Aso, the glove guru with Wilson, shows you a great technique to crack a baseball glove in 5 minutes.
I used to use a rubber mallet to pound my ball gloves but decided to use one of these as it's rounder. It does a good job and appears to be very well made. Seems a bit expensive. A rubber mallet costs about $12 and does about the same job.
Needless to say, it does exactly what it's designed to do, and does it very well. Much more effective than punching the glove pocket and can also be used to rip other areas of the glove itself (see YouTube video online).