

🛠️ Gear up like a pro—because ordinary tools just won’t cut it.
The Gerber Gear MP600 Pro Scout Multi-Plier is a premium, stainless steel multitool featuring 13 versatile tools including needle nose pliers, Fiskars scissors, and a patented universal saw coupler. Designed for quick one-hand operation and equipped with the Saf.T.Plus locking system, it offers rugged durability and secure handling. Packaged with a convenient ball sheath, this multitool is engineered for professionals and adventurers who demand reliability and efficiency in every task.












| Brand | Gerber |
| Color | No Color |
| Included Components | Sheath |
| Item dimensions L x W x H | 9.45 x 5.51 x 2.36 inches |
| Material | Stainless Steel |
| Number of Pieces | 1 |
J**L
Quality product
Looks great a little stiff but should work in.
B**B
Great tool
Great multi tool.
D**.
Buy this tool today !
This is an awesome tool! Buy it, it's well worth the money. The scissors work well and stay sharp. The black cutting blade is interchangeable with standard jig-saw blades. This is an ingenious design because you can change it out with a bimetal, aggressive wood cutting, or the tile saw type blade that comes with it. One-hand, wrist-flick opening rules over the competition....and all the blades lock when opened. Mine came with a nylon belt case and it's ok, however, it would be better if it had a pocket for the accessory adapter kit. I REALLY hope Gerber pays attention to this need because if they start making a belt case to accommodate both the Multitool and the kit, they will be hard pressed to keep them in stock! I digress...Buy this tool if you're looking for a Multitool for your belt.
P**R
Best Ever, Lasts for Years and Years
This is my second Gerber tool of this exact same model. My first one, that I've owned for many years still works and is riding on belt to my right as I type this. I usually have it with me at all times, except to sleep and to shower. The only other place I cannot wear it is on airplanes. This is why I bought a second one and had it shipped to my Dad's house so I can have it to wear when I fly up to see him. The best features are the easy to use tool release buttons, easy to open, and the scissors. The scissors is the item I use the most and won't own a utility tool that does have scissors; super handy.
P**R
Very Good; Not Great
For my use a multi-tool is something I want in my pocket or on my belt for handy use just about anywhere anytime. In this capacity I am drawing a line between a multi-tool and a "survival" or "emergency" tool. Something that does a lot of different tasks but takes a bit of effort to work might be very appropriate to toss in the glove box of your truck or into junk drawer in your kitchen. It is not the same as a tool you want to carry with you everywhere every day. A back packing or camping tool might fit a place in the middle where compactness trumps ease of use. But that isn't my focus in this review. I ordered one of these because I had a job-specific need for a tool with both wire cutters and scissors. Needle nose pliers would be a big plus. From reading various reviews of multi-tools it seemed like this one had wire cutters that actually worked whereas for many other tools the wire cuters were written off as ineffective. Also the pliers got good reviews where some other choices did not. I need to disclose I am an advocate (addict?) of the Swiss Army Knife. I keep a medium-small one (Tinker) in my pocket at all times and cannot count the number of times I use it even in unexpected situations. Or the number of times friends co-workers and family ask to use it: "Have you got your Swiss Army Knife with you?" is almost a joke with people who know me. They know I always do. And it gets used literally dozens of times a day. It is small, reliable, effective, and easy to use. This adds up to conveinience. When I have to be without it, such as when flying commercially, I really miss it. I also have owned a Buck multi-tool for years that was a gift and lives in my truck. So the concept of a multi tool as a keep-handy item is not completly foreign to me. The important factors are reliability, durability, effectiveness, and most of all convenience. That last one, convenience is really the crux. The other factors I listed really just enhance its convienence. After all, if it isn't handy, or if it doesn't get the job done, or if you have to go through a number of extra steps just to use it, then you might as well go to your tool box and grab the "real" tool for the job. The "real" tool will always do a better job more effectively than a multi tool, but sometimes a multi tool is good enough and if it is handy right in your pocket or on your belt, Hurrah! For my use that is what a multi-tool is all about. The Gerber 600 is sturdy and it does what it is supposed to do. The scissors work properly. The wire cutter actually cuts wire, The pliers are solid. The knife blade has conventional edge at the tip and is serrated further up the blade for a variety of cutting tasks, though the knife is rather small. All the tools lock in the open position. The construction is stainless steel. One feature I was luke-warm on before I bought was the abrasive-blade saw. However it is a replaceable blade which you can easily swap out with any number of jig saw (saber saw) blades in stock at your local hardware store. There are lots of different styles of blades available from metal cutting blades to blades for sawing wood, so pick the one out that suits your situation and fit it to your 600 multi-tool. Cudos to Gerber for this feature! A solid idea! There is an accessory kit available for this tool that adapts it to take standard hex bits. The accessory pack comes with one adapter, three straight screwdriver bits, three phillips screwdriver bits, and three hex driver (allen key) bits. But since the bits are standard size you can change the mix to whatever suits your need. Personally I use a lot of square drive screws and often encounter torx screws, and since there are phillips and straight screwdriver bits on the 600 tool itself, I will change my set around a little to reflect my personal needs. All of the above is very good. Now for the not-so-good: You cannot access any of the tools without first deploying the pliers. The plier head slides out of the handle and locks in place with two spring-loaded push buttons. This is not a one handed operation, and though it is sturdy in construction, it is not silky smooth in operation. So right away you see that if you need to use this tool on the fly, you have to put down whatever it is you are working on and use both hands to first deploy the pliers, no matter what other tool you wish to use. I suspect that most regular users would just leave the pliers in the deployed position most of the time. There is little to be gained by retracting them other than 1-1/2 inches less length overall. But of course the tool doesn't fit fully into the belt pouch with the pliers out, so it is at risk of being lost or knocked out. Next the other blades and tools deploy from the inside of the handles. This is good and bad. It means your grip on the handle when using the pliers is not compromised by the folded tools, but it also means that they are a little less convenient to get a hold of. You see the handles only open about 50 degrees, not 180, or even 90.... so the opposite handle is always a little bit in your way as you try to open any tool. Also deploying any tool is pretty much a two handed operation. As long as I leave the pliers out then with a little manipulating I can lay the tool on the table or my knee and open the knife blade, the scissors, and the metal file with one hand, but it isn't easy. Why just these three? They are on the outside edges of the handles and are the most accessible. The forth tool on the outside edge is the abrasive saw blade which I cannot get a good enough grip on to operate one-handed. No tools can be re-folded one-handed. You need two hands to defeat the lock to fold the tool. To be fair I do not know of any other multi-tool that is designed specifically to be one-handed operation, but if you can get it to work with one hand it is a plus. In this case I would be less critical if at least the knife blade was easier to get at instead of having to use two hands to first deploy the pliers and then proabaly still fiddle a little to open the knife blade. The remaining tools are all next to impossible to get out even with two hands unless you happen to have a Swiss Army Knife in your pocket to use as a tool to open the other tools. You simply cannot get a decent grip on them. Most, but not all of them have a provision to get your thumbnail under a little tab thing on thier spine, but the operation is too stiff. Also all of those thumbnail tabs are at least partially obstructed by other tools when all the tools are folded. They are a bear to get at. One tool, the can opener, has no provision for getting at it in any way whatsoever and is exceedingly difficult to deploy. My wife took a gander at this multi-tool, and though she is no shrinking violet, she couldn't operate ANY of the tools. NONE OF THEM! Everything was WAY too stiff and WAY too hard for her to get a grip on. And those teensey patially obscured thumbnail tabs? They would have just broken her nails. They are only just barely useable with rugged work-toughened man-thumbnails. That is except for the can opener which is just about impossible altogether. Maybe you don't think it is important for a woman to be able to operate a tool if you are a guy, but I report it here because it gives you and idea of just how stiff, crude, and difficult the operation really is; or putting it another way, how silky-smooth and easy it ISN'T. Back to the impossible-to-get-at can opener.... the tip is ground to a point. On some competitor's tools the tip is squared off a little which allows it do double duty as a small straight or phillips screwdriver, as well as a little prying tool.... something the rest of the can opener blade compliments... and a design that makes the can opener one of my most-used tools on my Swiss Army Knife, though almost never for opening cans. Why didn't Gerber copy this clever feature? It doesn't matter though because You will have great difficulty deploying the can opener, which isn't much of a loss since it is only good for opening cans anyway. The add-on tool kit is a nifty idea. My one complaint is that the adapter sleeve which goes over the phillips head screwdriver is only held in place by a magnet, and cannot be stored on the tool. It has to be removed and placed back in its own holder and sheath every time. Loose this adapter and the kit is useless. If you have to work in a tight spot, and you are using this feature, there is a very good chance you will knock the bit and the adapter loose. Just hope it falls where you can find it and retreive it! My bottom line is that this is a pretty good tool, but not a super-great tool. What keeps it from being great is the lack of convenience factor. Specifically if the various tools were smoother in operation and easier to deploy it would be really nifty. And the devil is in the details here. If the handles opened at least 90 degrees,.... if the pliers were silky smooth to deploy, maybe with a flick of the tool, (instructions suggest you can do this with a flick, but mine are way too stiff)... if the other tools were not so darn stiff to open, or if they had devised a better means of getting a grip on them (c'mon Gerber....pocket knives solved this problem at least a century ago), my review could have been 5 stars. The way it is, however, it is more of a toss-it-in-the-drawer tool for me than a wear-it-on-my-belt tool. Since I have several tool boxes full of "real" tools I really don't need or want a toss-it-in-the-drawer tool. By the time I walk to the drawer I can just as easily have walked to my tool box.
J**S
Handiest multitool available
I've had multiple of these Gerber "easy-out" multitools in the past and have loved every single one of them to the point I honestly won't have any others, unless they are gifts. The ONLY complaint I have is the inability of being able to take the file off to sharpen the knife blade(s) in a survival / camping situation. Ooooh, and the scissors...if you're rough with them, the pivot will loosen to the point you'll need to snug it back up by peening it with a hammer, but I consider that abuse for what they're designed for. While not perfect, they're amazing! And the built in fidget ability to "waaaaachaaa" the pliers out of the front with a flick of the wrist helps a slow day go by faster.
5**0
Quick fix Multi-tool
I have used this in industry for years. It saves a lot of time not running for a tool. The serrated blade makes it good for cutting multiple types of materials. I was surprised how much I use the scissors. It is compact & easy to open. I have used tools like it but the blades did not lock which is a safety hazard. I only had to purchase a new one because I misplaced the old one. It held up real well and is easy to recommend to others. I even bought a back up just in case I lost this one.
S**E
Best multi tool I have ever owned
The Gerber MP 600 multi tool is the handiest tool you can carry on your hip. When you need a hand to hold what you’re doing, with your free hand you can easily grab your gerber and with a flick of your wrist your pliers are ready to work. There is a multitude of different tools In this handy, compact unit. It can’t fix every situation, but it’s gotten me out of a few jams
Trustpilot
Hace 3 semanas
Hace 1 mes