60/80-PCs Hard Alloy Screw Nail Weights, Stamped Insert Bass Fishing Review
Our verdict
At $9.99, this 60/80-piece screw nail weight kit lands mid-pack on price but tops the field on rating, with a 4.9-star average across 49 reviews, the highest of any sinker compared here. Bundled with a storage case, it's a strong pick for bass anglers who want an organized assortment rather than loose weights.
Check price on AmazonBest for
Bass anglers who want an assorted 80-piece screw-in nail weight kit that comes with its own case for organization, rather than loose sinkers that rattle around in a tackle box.
Skip if
Skip this if you specifically need a confirmed metal alloy weight and not just a marketed 'hard alloy' name paired with a plastic case, or if 49 reviews feels too small a sample compared to the 1,000+ review listings here.
- Material Plastic
- Size Assorted - 80PCs
- Color unpainted
- Pieces 80
- Feature Sinkers, Case
- Priced 17% below the category median ($11.99 across 91 tracked models)
Our scorecard
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Owner rating4.9/5
4.9 average across 49 owner ratings
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Popularity0.6/5
49 owner reviews, fewer than most models here
The overall score is owner satisfaction weighted by how many reviews back it, so a high rating from few reviews counts for less. The bars below show where this model stands against the other fishing gear and tackle we track in this category on price, popularity and size. Context, not marks against it, and our read of the data, not a lab test.
Overview
This 60/80-piece screw nail weight kit sells for $9.99, positioning it below the Reaction tungsten pack at $19.99 but above the Caleb bulk-lead set at $5.69. The name promises 'hard alloy' weights, though the listing's material field is filled in as Plastic, which most likely refers to the included storage case rather than the weights themselves, an ambiguity worth flagging before you buy based on the title alone.
The kit ships unpainted and bundles 80 pieces in an assorted size range, with the case called out as a specific feature alongside the sinkers. That combination, weights plus a dedicated case, sets it apart from the loose-pack listings in this comparison, which sell sinkers without any organizational extra, a detail that matters for anglers who hate digging through a tangle of loose weights at the bottom of a tackle bag.
The review numbers are the standout here. A 4.9-star average across 49 reviews is the highest rating among every sinker in this lineup, edging out the 4.7-star tungsten options and well ahead of the 4.3 to 4.6-star range of the other lead listings. Combined with 300+ units bought last month, the pattern suggests buyers are pleased with both the weights and the case that comes with them.
Pros
- 4.9-star rating is the highest among all sinkers compared in this roundup
- 300+ bought last month shows healthy, active demand
- 80-piece assortment plus an included case adds organization loose-sinker packs don't offer
- Priced at $9.99, cheaper than the $12.99 to $19.99 tungsten options here
- Unpainted finish keeps the weights neutral for anglers who prefer a natural look
Cons
- Material field lists 'Plastic,' likely referring to the case, leaving the actual weight alloy unconfirmed beyond the 'hard alloy' name
- 49 reviews is a small sample next to the 1,000+ review counts of several comparisons
- Unpainted finish may not suit anglers who want a specific color to match conditions
- Screw-in nail weights require a bit more rigging effort than a simple slip or pyramid sinker
Specifications
| Material | Plastic |
|---|---|
| Size | Assorted - 80PCs |
| Color | unpainted |
| Pieces | 80 |
| Feature | Sinkers, Case |
Performance notes
Screw-in nail weights work by threading directly into soft plastic baits, adding internal weight without a separate egg or bullet sinker sliding on the line. That design is popular in bass fishing because it keeps the bait's profile compact and weedless. Packaging 80 pieces as an assortment means anglers get a spread of weights to match different bait sizes and depths in one purchase, and the included case keeps them sorted rather than loose in a tackle bag. The 'hard alloy' name in the product title suggests a harder metal than pure lead, though the listing's own material field just says Plastic, which points to the case rather than the weights. At $9.99, the price sits comfortably in the middle of this comparison group, between the cheapest bulk-lead option and the priciest tungsten pack.
What buyers say
A 4.9-star average across 49 reviews is the strongest rating pattern in this entire comparison, ahead of the 4.7-star tungsten listings and well above the 4.3 to 4.6-star lead options. While 49 reviews is a modest sample size, especially next to listings with over 1,000 reviews, a rating this high with no apparent detractors in the pattern suggests the case-and-weights bundle is landing well with buyers. Add in 300+ units bought last month, and the combination of a near-perfect score with steady sales points to a product that's satisfying the bass-fishing crowd it's aimed at.
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Frequently asked questions
Are these sinkers made of metal or plastic?
The weights are marketed as 'hard alloy,' but the listing's material field says Plastic, which most likely describes the included case rather than the weights themselves. Buyers should treat the exact weight alloy as unconfirmed based on the listing data.
Does this kit come with a case?
Yes, the listing specifically calls out a case as a feature alongside the 80-piece sinker assortment, which sets it apart from loose-pack sinker listings. That extra organization is likely part of why this kit holds a 4.9-star rating across 49 reviews.
Is this a good option for bass fishing specifically?
The product name and screw-in nail weight design are aimed at bass fishing, where anglers thread weight directly into soft plastic baits to keep the bait's profile compact. At $9.99 with a 4.9-star rating across 49 reviews, it's positioned well for that specific use case.