🐾 Snap to It! The Ultimate Mouse Trap Experience!
The Victor M156-20 Metal Pedal Sustainably Sourced FSC Wood Snap Mouse Trap is a pack of 20 traps designed for effective and humane rodent control. With a precision trigger for quick kills, this eco-friendly trap is made from responsibly sourced materials and has been a trusted choice for pest control for over a century. Perfect for both home and professional use, it offers the flexibility of being reusable or disposable.
Item Weight | 0.05 Pounds |
Number of Pieces | 20 |
Item Dimensions L x W x H | 9.63"L x 5.63"W x 4.38"H |
Target Species | Mouse |
Is Electric | Yes |
Material Type | Metal |
Style | 20 Traps |
Color | Wood |
B**S
Watch the Setup Video
I've used Victor traps for decades and they are top notch. The old style (no plastic) sometimes had some misfires catching the mouse. The mouse would trip the trap without being caught. These new traps with the plastic are so much more sensitive but I found them hard to set. I saw the video and discovered there were different ways to set them to change the sensitivity and hence the ease of setting. Without seeing the video - I had been setting them to the highest sensitivity. The hardest to set position. I thought the metal piece was so slippery trying to engage the plastic piece - I resorted to using sandpaper on the metal piece to rough it up a little. This seemed to help. But now that I now about how to set (thanks to the video) - I will try some less sensitive positions.
R**H
VICTOR ORIGINAL MOUSE TRAP - COMPANY SINCE 1898, don't waste your money on the more expensive traps
This trap cost me 50 cents. One of the first things you need to try to do is to find out where the mice are coming into your house. My house is over 100 years old, so I'm still trying to find areas they can sneak in. I watched some YouTube videos to figure out the right way to use this trap and what to use for bait, a very small amount of peanut butter, just enough to fit on the end of a tooth pick to the bait peddle is recommended by VICTOR. They say if a mouse is able to take the bait without springing the trap, it is more a result of over baiting, which adversely effects the sensitivity of the trap. They recommend when setting the trap to hold the kill bar down, lift the peddle at 180゚ angle and place the rod under the little groove on the bait plate. They also recommend placing the snap-trap perpendicular to a wall or baseboard with the trigger pedal being closest to the wall. The Victor website gives detailed instructions and they offer a one year warranty from the date of purchase. It would probably cost more to mail them back than the price of the traps. You can contact them directly at 1-855- 5-VICTOR. You've got to be careful, I've smacked the kill bar against my knuckles a few times and it hurts. I practiced setting the trap without the peanut butter first until I knew what I was doing. When you read the one star reviews, VICTOR sometimes comments with this helpful information, which I've added to my review. This same model trap has been used for over a 115 years. My grandather used these same traps, and reused them over and over again. If it ain't broke, don't fix it. You don't need anything expensive and fancy, this does the job. The mice die with in 30 seconds, which is much more humane than using glue traps. It took a little bit of practice to set it, you don't want to smack your fingers with the kill bar, so be careful. Once you know what you're doing, it's very simple to set. Since I personally don't want to deal with removing the dead mouse from the trap, this is cheap enough to throw in the trash with the mouse. But it is certainly reusable. I use a long grabber reacher tool to pick up the dead mouse and trap and drop it in the trash can. The metal pedal that you add the bait to stays very close to the wooden base, which makes it much easier for the mouse to set off. You don't want the mouse to get away with the bait, that hasn't happened with this trap. I set up a BLINK camera in my attic to try to figure out where the mice were coming from. They have been messing with mouse poop and pee in my attic for too many years, ruining many of my items. I am fed up with that, it's time to fight. Once I saw them running around in a particular area, I set the traps. They mark their areas with mouse poop and pee. Then I set my Blink camera about 7 feet away. What I've been seeing on my cam is very strange. I've had many dead mice in the traps that are cannibalized, eaten by other mice. I wish I didn't have to kill the mice, I see how the other mice react when they see a dead mouse, part of their family probably. Right now I have too many mice to deal with and the live traps wouldn't work. I'd be a mice taxi service driving 3 miles away from my house daily. Within 24 hours the mice ate most of the dead mice in the traps. They're not finding anymore food to eat in my house. They grabbed the dead mouse including the traps in their mouth and dragged them about 2 feet away under a chair, they're really strong. Certain mice they left alone. They ate almost everything there was nothing at all was left in the trap, except some fur and a tail. If I didn't have my blink camera, I certainly would have thought that the mice were eating the bait and the traps were not working. So if the mice have nothing to eat, they might eat the dead. With my blink camera, I feel like I'm watching a National Geographic special on mice. I know exactly what time of the day, usually nighttime when they're running around and their behavior which is interesting. My Blink takes video clips and has night vision. I move my blinks around the house. Of course you don't need a blink to catch mice, but it certainly makes it more helpful. And I know when I need to reset my traps without having to go up in the cold attic or down to my basement. It is a bit morbid, but you get used to it. And it helps me kill the mice, which is the most important. I think my grown sons and their wives are getting tired of mom sending them text video clips from my blink camera of strange mice behavior and dead mice. But this year being 2020 is a very strange time in all our lives. Now I can start cleaning up my attic without having to deal with more mouse poop and pee, which is disgusting. Mice contaminate food, spread diseases and viruses... The CDC (CENTER FOR DISEASE CONTROL) lists: HANTAVIRUS, PLAGUE, SALMONELLOSIS, LEPTOSPIROSIS...add they chew on wood and wiring in the walls.
T**D
Reliable traps
Victor traps have worked best for me for many years. But sometimes a smart rat or mouse can outwit any trap. I was glad to find 20 of them in a deal as I have decided to make a mouse mine field to catch whatever is under my sink. Hopefully this will do the trick. I'll update with the results. I bored small holes in the traps and mounted each one with a screw onto a piece of ply board. This thing is like nitro glycerin, if one goes off most of the others will. Not for someone which is afraid of this type of trap.
L**N
Work well, but prefer metal tab trigger
These mousetraps are really great, and every mouse that has triggered one has met the same grim fate. HOWEVER, I do prefer the version of these traps with the metal tab trigger mechanism. For two of these, I tried multiple times to set the trigger, but the mechanism kept slipping, snapping the trap shut and scaring the bejesus out of me. I've never have that issue with the metal tab release, and that version kills mice just as dead. I will say that for all but those two (which were likely defective), the trigger set fine. Note that for both the metal and plastic triggers, these are, as others have noted, extremely sensitive.
J**R
THWACK!
The plastic pedal is the way to go. I live on the edge of a forest and deer mice have run riot in every car I've owned. I didn't have much luck with the metal peddle trap, but the plastic? Dispatched a dozen of the little baskets over two days. They can be tricky to set, you have to place the trap with the business end against the wall or where they run and don't feed them, use p-butter sparingly, just enough to fill the little holes on the peddle. Set it to sensitive and wait for the mayhem to begin!
M**D
easy to use, tried and true design, inexpensive.
you dont need to reinvent the wheel. This design has been around for a long time and it works great to get rid of mice that are destroying your garage. If you want to trick your wife, partner, or kids then you could set a couple of these up in the hallway in the middle of the night. Have fun catching varmits!
T**N
My usual brand, but seem to be going downhill
I have bought these several times for my barn. The last batch I got was missing the bar to hold down the spring on about 4 of them and the trip panel was flat and had no notch on another 2. Very disappointed with this. First time I have had any of these with issues. But this was 6 out of a box of 12. Still my go to brand, but slowly losing confidence.
E**S
Easy and effective
Effective! The little beasties were living in our screened in porch. Not okay! Handy dandy tip. If you bait the trap on top on a paper towel you can fold the ends over a successful catch. Pull the ends of the paper towel to move trap. Wrap up ends for disposal. My squeamish self prefers NOT to touch a successful trap.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
1 week ago