Hoof Testers — Cattle Lameness Diagnostic Tool

$130.00

Hoof testers (also called hoof pinchers) for diagnosing the source of lameness in a cows claw. The first step before any treatment.

5 in stock

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KEY FEATURES:

  • 34cm overall length — leverage for accurate pressure on adult cattle claws
  • Smooth pinching surfaces avoid soft-tissue damage during diagnosis
  • Essential first step in any lameness investigation
  • Used by farmers, professional trimmers, and bovine vets
  • Pairs with hoof nippers and trimming disc for full corrective work
  • Ships from Mount Compass on the Fleurieu Peninsula

BENEFITS / DESCRIPTION:

Hoof testers are a diagnostic tool, not a cutting tool. When a cow is visibly lame, the question is “where exactly is the pain?” — and the answer determines what treatment she needs. You apply gentle pinching pressure to different points on the claw with the testers; the cow flinches when you hit the painful spot. That tells you whether you are dealing with a sole ulcer, white line disease, a foreign body in the white line, or something else entirely. Skipping this step and going straight to trimming is how you waste time on the wrong treatment.

These testers are 34cm long — the right size for adult cattle claws on a working dairy. The smooth pinching surfaces are deliberate: aggressive teeth would damage healthy tissue and confuse the diagnosis. Every farmer dealing with regular lameness should own a pair. Vets carry them as standard kit. The technique is simple to learn (apply firm pressure systematically across the sole and walls; watch for flinch response) and pays off in faster, more accurate lameness treatment.

The Hoof Testers ship from Mount Compass on the Fleurieu Peninsula. Pair them with hoof nippers, a trimming disc, and a quality hoof knife to build a complete cattle hoof care kit. We use these on our own herd whenever a cow shows up lame — diagnosis first, treatment second.

SPECIFICATIONS:

Spec Value
Length 34cm
Tool type Diagnostic — pinching pressure
Use case Locating source of lameness in cattle claws
Surface Smooth — non-damaging to healthy tissue
Operation Two-handed
Brand Hoof It

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS:

How do I use hoof testers to diagnose lameness?

Restrain the cow safely, lift the affected foot, and systematically apply pinching pressure across the sole and along the white line of each claw. Move in small increments. The cow will flinch or pull away when you hit the painful area. That spot is the location of the lesion — a sole ulcer, white line abscess, or foreign body, depending on what you find when you trim into it.

Can hoof testers be used on healthy cows?

Yes — testers do not damage healthy tissue. You can apply firm pressure to a non-lame foot without causing harm or discomfort. This is useful for training: pinch a healthy claw to feel “no response”, then a known-lame claw to learn what a positive response feels like.

What is the difference between hoof testers and hoof nippers?

Completely different jobs. Testers diagnose by applying pressure — they do not cut. Nippers cut horn for trimming. The two tools look superficially similar (both are large two-handed pliers), but using nippers as testers will damage healthy tissue, and using testers as nippers will not work because they have no cutting edge.

Should I trim before or after using the testers?

Test first, trim second. The testers tell you exactly where to focus your trimming. Trimming blindly without diagnosis often misses the actual lesion and risks over-trimming healthy claw.

Are hoof testers necessary for routine trimming?

No — they are a diagnostic tool for lame cows. For routine maintenance trimming on a healthy herd, you do not need them. But if you have any cow showing lameness, testers are the first tool to reach for.