🛠️ The only tool you’ll ever need—carry confidence everywhere!
The SQT2048 20-in-1 Multitool is a compact, foldable, and self-locking professional-grade tool crafted from high-quality stainless steel. Featuring replaceable tungsten alloy jaws and a sharp 7CR17 blade, it combines 20 versatile functions including pliers, saw, screwdrivers, and more. Designed for durability and portability, it folds to just 3.9 inches and weighs 11.3 ounces, making it the perfect companion for DIY projects, home repairs, and outdoor adventures.
Color | Stainless Steel |
Material | Stainless Steel |
Brand | SQT |
Item Weight | 0.32 Kilograms |
Included Components | Plier |
Number of Pieces | 1 |
Folded Size | 3.9 |
Manufacturer | SQT |
Part Number | SQT2048 |
Item Weight | 11.3 ounces |
Package Dimensions | 4.65 x 2.44 x 1.73 inches |
Item model number | SQT2048 |
Style | SQT2048 |
Item Package Quantity | 1 |
Batteries Required? | No |
N**A
Great tool to use and abuse
This tool offers all the functionality of the leading brands at a fraction of the cost.The fit and finish is good, with no sharp edges that can affect the user. All tools deploy and lock up with ease. The inclusion of a pocket clip. Is much appreciated.I love using my multi tools, but I have frequently broken and lost my trusty Leatherman Waves and Sidekicks. This is a great price point for replaceable tool that will see heavy use.I’ll be back for another when this one walks off.
B**
Worth getting
Great tool, I bought one of these for my nephew to work on electric cars, it's put together great, the tools are accessible when it is folded up, they are all locking, and the pliers is tough the wire cutters cut like an alligator. Great price well made for being from China 🇨🇳 it is worth the money, buy one 👍
W**H
Exceptional value, Good Quality, and a Few Flaws
The media could not be loaded. I'm not a multitool or tool expert, but I used this tool on job sites for 340 hours, used every tool except the can-opener, and used it more than a dozen times per day.General: 4/5.I love the feel in your hand. It's a nice weight, rounded in the right places, and you do feel well-equipped to take on whatever physical tasks may confront you throughout the day at work or play. I have to agree with one (real) mutli-tool expert on YouTube that this is the best (or among the very best) values for the money among the cheap tier of medium-sized multi-tools. It's a near-clone of a Leatherman tool, takes its design cues from them, is aesthetically attractive, mostly ergonomic, and for less than 1/3 or so of the price, is quite hard to beat. The exterior tools are all easy to unfold and lock beautifully. The interior tools also lock beautifully, but the design for unfolding them should have been better thought out. The tool gets extra points because it at least gives every indication of being fully disassembleable with a star bit, and has a pocket clip, which is removable upon disassembly. However, there are some definite flaws. The only over-arching flaw would be the less-than-maximal steel hardness of the tool. This has got to be a price-saving measure, but for what I paid ($29.99 plus tax), it would seem to me to be ridiculous to expect more. But at 340 hours intermittent use, there are noticeable dings scratches and general signs of wear.But let's go tool by tool:★ Pliers: 5/5.According to Leatherman, this triangular plier shape is the strongest, which makes sense intuitively. To make this claim, Leatherman would have had to have done tests, and this clone therefore benefits from those tests. The pliers are great. While they are not spring-action and are not multiplied in strength by any lever action or jaw-locking mechanism, this is a smaller and more minimalist tool than the tools with those plier-features, so no point deductions there. The pliers are smooth, well aligned, have no unintended play, and the serrations line up perfectly. They only close fully at the very end, and there is a tiny fraction-of-a-millimeter space where they do not meet, but I believe this to be a feature and not a bug, intended to minimize wear. The needle-nose element overlaps slightly with where the utility of tweezers leaves off, which is one reason you know they are good. The regular-plier function (the concave cutaway) is serviceable but unremarkable.★ Wirecutters: 5/5. Replaceable and cut like butter.★ Wirestrippers: 4/5. No complaints but nothing particularly excellent about them.★ Knife: 3.75/5. Decent but the steel hardness makes it lose its sharpness by half after maybe about 4 accumulated hours of whittling and other varied use. One-hand openable until it gets gummed up. Once oiled it's back to normal, or better.★ Serrated knife: 4.25/5 Quite good. Still very sharp despite lots of use on plastic, wood, twine, etc. I do like the added functionality of the hook blade on the top edge of the serrated knife, but as you can see from the promotional video demonstrating this tool's functionality, it was NEVER sharp, and even when brand new required a second-effort to cut through twine. Smh. And I'm not sure how to sharpen it. Would be awesome if it started out just as sharp as the other blades.★ "Diamond" File and Wood file: 2.5/5. Cheap-feeling, smaller than on other multi-tools. It is shortened in order to accommodate the pliers, which saves maybe 1.3 mm of width. I'm left wondering if that milimeter is worth it. Not sure, but I think I would rather have an excellent set of files. The wood file is 2/5 and the diamond, which I doubt is diamond, is 3/5. I wasn't too mad about the diamond file when I realized that it is truly an (5/5) nail file.★Scissors: 4.25/5. Great. They lock very well (unlike what one dip-nut on YouTube said who reviewed this tool without ever having used it even once, smdh). They are smooth and satisfying to use. They got dull faster than I would like (see steel hardness), but I may or may not have abused them a little bit and used them for other than their strict factory purpose. (In the video I included it seems difficult to make the scissors lock. That is only the case if you are trying to do it one-handed. They lock just fine.)★ Saw: 4/5: A bit ergonomically awkward in the hand, and so sharp as to stick rather than slide, but that may be a function of the living and sappy softer (fir) woods I was using it on. While certainly no substitute for even a sub-par bow saw, it worked well in a pinch and did its intended job well enough in the end.★ Reversible/removable Philips head/flathead: 1.75/5. Grr. This is the only feature that actually makes me mad. This would be a 5 out of 5 if for but one fact: The d*mn bit is not secure in the chuck! It just randomly fell out for no reason after only one use, despite the little spring-loaded bearing in the bit meant to keep it in place. Either splurge for a magnet or do your measurements correctly, engineers!—preferably both. There's no excuse for this except on a trash-quality, 99¢-store tool. The bit was missing for at least a week, but luckily I found it eventually. I learned to keep it in place with a tiny twig or a piece of folded paper. So now it works beautifully. I just have to shim it in with something every time. Maybe super-gluing a very thin piece of metal in would fix the problem, but I don't know.★ Awl: 4/5. Does it's job. Sharp in the point and the edge is sharp enough to shave skin off my thumb while not strictly being a knife blade.★ Large Flathead Screwdriver: 2/5. The Edge needed to be thicker. Had it been thicker, the multi-tool would still be as versatile as it needed to be, since there is also a smaller flathead screwdriver in this tool, as already mentioned. It bent a bit, and rather too easily. Some will say, "but you used it on the wrong size screw!" I will say, "incorrect, IT was the wrong size." If it had been the correct thickness, I wouldn't have had to use it on the wrong size screw. There should be no redundancy of functionality between the two flathead elements. Engineers get a C- on that assignment.★ Carrying Case/Belt-Pouch: 2/5. Like almost all of the pouches for these multi-tools that are not made of leather and that do not come with the top-tier multi-tools, this pouch is junk. It makes no accommodation for the fact that there is a pocket clip, and so unnecessary wear accrues on the pouch. I just threw it away.In any case, I want to use a tool, not look like a tool. 😝.★ Pocket Clip: 5/5. Extra points for being removable. While I work with plastic Vexar netting which would occasionally slide under the clip and pull the tool out of my pocket, taking it dangerously away from me and landing the tool who knows where, I can't imagine a design that would prevent that from happening, so no deductions there. I just learned to keep it in a different pocket.★ Removable/Reversible Phillips and Flathead Eyeglass Screw Driver: 5/5. Solid design, unique feature. Totally awesome.★ Can Opener ?/5. I didn't actually use it so I won't speak on it with any authority, but it seems quite well machined visually speaking. There is also a semicircular little blade Edge machined into the bottom edge of the can opener. I forget what that is for. I didn't use it but it does seem sharper than the hook blade on the serrated blade.
K**A
Quality tool
Use it almost every day. Excellent tool!
P**R
Works great
It's a great tool for an unbeatable prize. Compared to pricier products it's heavier and opening and locking mechanisms are clumsy. But at that price you can't complain.
K**N
High quality and versatile multi tool
I buy a lot of these multitools... I don't know why but I just like collecting them. This is one of the best of the leatherman wave + type clones. Very similar to the Shall. I think the Shall is the best by a hair. They say most of these are made in the same factory in China but I have my doubts since the build quality varies greatly.
C**G
High quality rivals my Leatherman Titanium Wave.
Very nice.
A**O
An "Okay" Equivalent.
I really wanted to try a multi tool with big scissors on the outside so they would be more easily accessible. This tool is of really good quality for the price. The design checks all the boxes with the same features the more expensive multi tools have. In my opinion the pocket clip is installed on the "wrong" side of the tool, so I decided to move it to the other side. Boy was that a big mistake as it was quite difficult to reassemble. After some months of use the outer tools are difficult to open I may need to adjust the screws. That is the only reason for the 4*.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
1 day ago