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Crescent 44' Indexing Deck Removal Bull Bar - DKB446X, Multi, One Size

Free shipping on orders over $29.99

$99.36

$ 47 .51 $47.51

In Stock

1.Style:44 Inch New


  • Double fork design provides balanced lift on both sides of the nail. boards are removed faster, cleaner and with less effort
  • Rugged indexing joint allows for maximum flexibility and increased leverage
  • Patent pending center nail puller offering better balance and more leverage
  • Precision tips designed for fast access between boards and reduced damage for reclaiming materials
  • Gripping teeth on forks assist in preventing board slippage


Everyone can count on the Bull Bar from Crescent for all of their deck projects. Unlike similar tools, the innovative 180º indexing head changes positions, allowing the user to easily select the best angle for maximum leverage and access. The Bull Bar has a double fork design with teeth that grip the edge of the board, decreasing slippage and providing a balanced lift on both sides of the nail. Closed positions offer fast action for shorter pulls. Open positions allow for powerful downward force on large planks and are an ideal solution for ground-level work. Additionally, a robust center nail puller will remove ring shank nails and stubborn long nails with better balance and increased leverage.


JFG.
August 6, 2025
So much better than I expected. Dramatically reduced the time and effort. So much better and safer than a crow bar. Ideal for disassembling Pallets/ Pallet lumber and repairing or removing deck lumber and boards.Well worth the investment. The nail puller is an additional bonus. Worked so well.The angle easily adjusts in seconds making the tool much more functional/flexible. Just push in the button and set the angle.
J. Amelia
July 16, 2025
This is my 2nd attempt to review this product . I have stopped reviewing anything until this gets published. I absolutely love this tool!It removed the deck, the nails, and cut the timing of the work by an incredible amount of time.I would never try to remove a deck without it again. Nails, screws, it did them both with ease.
Chief
July 13, 2025
Great. Tool for removing deck or dock boards
Robert Ward
July 10, 2025
Great strong tool, use it on most of my customers deck demosYou must remove at least one deck board by a crowbar firstThe tips will not fit between the spaces between the deck boards, and give you enough leverage to pry the board up!
Darren
June 19, 2025
Worked awesome for prying up my old deck. The horns allowed the board to slide along the beam and rip boards apart from the deck.All my screws were old and stripped so this was great for ripping the boards off.Lots of leverage and saves your back. Was able to do a 8 x 21 deck in a few hours time. Didn't even need a power tool for the whole job, only this tool.
Yup I Doo
May 26, 2025
Works perfectly for what i need - price and quality are excellent
Mike Miller
February 4, 2025
What a fantastic tool for lifting deck boards, worked perfectly!
Joe
January 22, 2025
Tool feels very sturdy and robust. Great tool for removing deck boards, ceiling boards, floor boards and other wood that is directly secured to a "joist". Price may seem a little high but, boards removed have very little damage and the time it took to do the job was greatly reduced.
Little Oak
January 10, 2025
This tool is a must have for taking off deck boards . I used this to take off all deck boards on a very large deck, a job which would have taken a week took a day and saved my back, very strong and easy to use
DCinDBar
December 24, 2024
I highly recommend this bar when dismantling an old wooden deck. It really saves your back! If the deck was nailed down, it works like a champ! If the deck was screwed down, it won't work as easily. My old deck that both nails & screws. After I took the time to remove the screws, the deck boards & nails came off easily. I'm glad I bought this bar!
Rambeau85
November 28, 2024
Durable and takes care of busting up pallets!
Jon Tobey
November 26, 2024
This product is fantastic. My business is repairing and refinishing decks in the Seattle area. I tear a lot of deck boards off. Today I was taking 10' long boards, 16" on center off in less than 60s! I pulled 30 boards, including disposing of them, in under an hour. (As pro, I time these things to make better bids.) The little nail puller is awesome! The puller I've been using often folds the heads of the nails up, but that didn't happen once with this tool.I only have too nits. First, it's heavy. I don't think it needs to be that beefy. Second nit is there are no directions and the two videos they have, done by well-intentioned amateurs, are horrible. I don't understand a company that can't make their own 1 min video and instead posts bad customer-made videos of their product. Those videos make this took look much harder to use than it is.Here is how to use it quickly and safely, which is important as today I was removing boards from a second story deck. First go to the farthest edge of the deck from the house. Remove that last board. You may need a pry bar for this first board because the prongs on the tool are a tiny bit thick to fit between 3/16" spaced boards (ok, 3 nits). Once that first board is up, adjust the tool so that it looks like a hoe, so that the tines curl TOWARD you. This is the opposite of what you see in the videos. The head should be at an acute angle to the handle. Now, you can insert the tool over the exposed joist at one end of a board (again, think of it as a hoe), and lift UP, not pry down like the videos. On the ends you will have to hold it at an angle and only be able to get one tine under the board, but it will still pry the end up just fine. Once you get going its very much like a hoeing motion: using two hands place tool over a joist, pry and then swing it over to the next joist. Likely, you will pull several joists worth of nails/pull.Using the tool this way, you can stand on the unpulled boards while you are working, and the tool is always resting on a joist when you pull. (Unlike that first video, I have no idea why that guy even likes the tool the way he was using it.) The fulcrum of the tool is NEVER on a board, it's always on a joist. You are pulling the board in front of your toes and working backwards.When I get to a place where I'm not comfortable any more because I have too few boards to stand on, I lay some new boards on the exposed joists to stand on, turn around, and repeat the procedure for the 6 or so boards that are laid against the house. Again, starting with prying up the board on the edge so I can expose the joist and lift up, working towards myself until the boards are all gone.
I like gadgety stuff
October 31, 2024
Took up 600sq feet of decking with it in less than 3 hours by myself. Really great if nailed. Boards that had screws were much more difficult. I don’t know if this is better or worse than other large pry bars but it’s half the price of some others. It’s extremely sturdy, and the articulating head means that you can work with good ergonomics whether you are standing on the deck or on the ground. And it’s not made in China.