Got this VEVOR Pallet Buster to help with disassembling pallets and other demolition for collecting salvaged lumber for use in a small workshop, which is great for practicing fine carpentry skills on a low budget. My goal is to be able to make some really nice stuff out of this scrap wood before I start on projects for kitchen and bathroom cabinets, and fine other furniture, using new wood, there are tons of neat examples of \"pallet wood projects\" on Youtube. Design, build quality, and functionality are all good, this works well as a pry bar and mostly as expected. The gray part is heavy duty solid steel, the orange part is a hollow tube handle extension, at first I was skeptical about handle but it works fine, the little bit of flexing may even be helpful, and being able to take it apart makes for easier storage & transport. Using this for pallet wood salvage definitely has a learning curve, at first I was splitting about two-thirds of the boards, now I'm splitting about one-third, but this is much faster and easier than using a small pry bar & claw hammer, which only splits about a quarter. When I combine this with using a cordless reciprocating saw to cut the split-prone edge joints, I can pry apart a pallet with only one or two splits, with more practice maybe no board splits. For demolition salvage, this should be similarly useful for decks, barn walls & floors, and other plank construction, I'm looking forward to trying it but haven't had the opportunity do that yet. I would not trust this to pry apart fine hardwood floors for salvage, but it could do that very fast for renovation. Note, the tines have blunt tips and are too \"fat\" to push into a wood joint, this can only push up from on a board from below with leverage against the structural joist it's attached to. If the tines were sharpened, e.g. with an angle grinder, it might be able to be pounded directly into joints with a hammer, or well aimed swing - that would also make for a brutal horror