CRKT Eat'N Tool

CRKT Eat’N Tool Review

I’m constantly honing my EDC key chain and was happy with the contents of it until recently. One of the most used items on my Keyring is a bottle opener. We all know that the best beers come with pop tops. After almost five years of opening hundreds of Guinness, Sam Adams, Red Strip, Yuengling and many other fine beers the soft aluminum of my free bottle opener wore out. First it became hard to open bottles, I had to really push hard to keep from slipping off the cap. So I started looking around for a replacement and this time I wanted bells ans whistles.

CRKT Eat'N Tool
CRKT Eat’N Tool

Google

 

My first choice in my search for a new and improved bottle opener was Google. Digging through the web I found a few neat novelties. Zombies that open with thier mouth, Skulls but mostly I found junk. With all the junk I found some good choices. I came across the CRKT Eat’N Tool, Nite Ize S-Biner Ahhh, Gerber 22-01769 Shard Keychain Tool and Boker Plus Vox Access Tool to name a few of the best ones I came across. Each had benifits and drawbacks to my needs. Before making a decision though I decided to try one more thing.

Asking My Readers

So I went on the Survivalpunk Facebook page and asked my readers what they would recommend. This is where i got some great suggestions! The suggestions from there were: The AGS Spam Can/ Bottle Opener,  LaRue Tactical Beverage Entry Tool Dillo, American Kami SharKey (gorgeous btw)Leatherman Carabiner and lastly the TAD Gear Skeleton key, which is now discontinued and I can’t find any trace of it(video here to drool). These were some very solid suggestions. I came very close to getting the Sharkey. Might still one day. Heck even at $100 I really wanted the Skeleton Key. Being cheap though I had to factor in price with functionality.

Local factor

If you’ve read here a while you know I like getting things locally. So the other day when I went into a local Surplus(ish) store and saw the Eat’N Tool there locally for $5  I decided that would be the winner. So it has partly impulse buy that I had spent two months thinking about. Now that I had made a decision it was time for testing.

Date on a Eat'N Tool

Eat’N

So the main reason I went with the Eat’N Tool (besides seeing it in person) was for its spork. I bring my lunch to work and have forgotten eating utensils many times. The idea of an EDC eating utensil appealed to me a lot. How did it perform in eating? Decent I would say. The spork is so smooth that I had a hard time scooping up some foods. The tiny prongs performed much better than I thought though. I would say that as a back up eating utensil it does good enough. The smooth surface does make cleaning easy though.

Bottle Opining with the Eat'N Tool
Bottle Opining with the Eat’N Tool

Bottle Opining

Now on to the main reason for getting this thing. Bottle cap’s. When writing this article at 6am I didn’t have any beer handy. I did have an empty bottle and a bottle capper so I went through several caps testing how well it opened bottles. My first impression was that the bottom lip was too rounded to be any good. I had a few slip offs but nothing out of the normal. I quickly and easily popped off caps once I got used to the shape of it. I Held it with my thumb in the hollow of the spork.

Pry Bar
Pry Bar

Other Functions

I went around using the flat head screw driver on things around the apartment. It worked great for everything it would fit in. Things like light switch plates and what not worked great. You can get some good torque on it. I used the screwdriver tip as a pry bar to open a paint can and it worked great. I think using it as a pry bar might be my favorite function to keep from using, and breaking, knife tips. I looked around and didn’t have any bolts to test it on.

Conclusion

For five bucks I know have an EDC bottle opener, Spork and Screwdriver/Pry Bar. Good enough for me. It was the best combination of the price/Functionality equation. It was smaller and lighter than some options. It passes initial test of approval and I’ll continue to run it in my EDC system to see how it performs. While also working on designs of one to fill all my needs.

What do you carry to open bottles? Why did you choose it and how does it work? Let me know in the comments.

 

Today’s article brought to you by the great folks over at Survivalgearbags.com home to all your Bug out bag and tactical needs.

 

 



     
           

9 thoughts to “CRKT Eat’N Tool Review”

  1. Typically my SAK. In a pinch, I use a rolled up piece of paper as a stop and leverage it with my hands….but mostly I don’t open glass bottles…I don’t drink beer, and water tends to come in twist off caps 🙂

    Does the Eat’N Tool go on our keyring? Seems a bit bulky….

    My EDC pack actually contains a spoon gouge…I like to carve my own spoons in a pinch…it impresses the others around the campfire 🙂

    db

  2. I thought It might be bulky but it’s kinda two dimensional so it’s wide and long but thin so it rides in the pocket really well.

    Alright Db be a show off with your spoon knife. It’s on my list of things to get. I’ve carved spoons without one, in fact I carved a spoon with my buck hoodlum, but its not easy not pretty.

  3. I recently added a Gerber SHARD to my EDC. It works well as a low profile multifunction tool with bottle opener being it’s current primary function.

  4. When I used to smoke, I learned how to open beers with a lighter. I still have lighters around like in the car or in my backpack or several around the house, but I don’t always have them on my person since I quit smoking. However, anything that’s remotely shaped like a lighter can be used to open a beer; basically, anything with a handle like a knife or a thick marker.

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