




🎸 Elevate your riff game with the pick that pros swear by!
The Jim Dunlop Ultex® Triangle Pick 1.0MM is a premium guitar pick made from aeronautical-grade Ultex material, offering exceptional durability and bright, articulate tone projection. Its unique triangle shape provides a larger gripping surface for enhanced control, making it a favorite among professional guitarists. Available in a 6-pack, this pick balances precision and comfort, perfect for rhythm and lead playing alike.




| ASIN | B00G3NZLGQ |
| Best Sellers Rank | #2,859 in Musical Instruments ( See Top 100 in Musical Instruments ) #124 in Guitar Picks & Bass Picks |
| Color Name | Light Brown |
| Compatible Devices | Guitar |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (959) |
| Date First Available | July 16, 2004 |
| Guitar Pick Thickness | thick |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Weight | 0.035 ounces |
| Item model number | 426P1.0 |
| Material Type | Ultex |
| Product Dimensions | 2.3 x 2.3 x 0.2 inches |
| Size | 1.0mm |
C**R
The perfect material married to the perfect size.
The Ultex compound is just rough enough to maintain an effortless grip and smooth enough for strumming and intricate picking. As others have noted elsewhere, it's the closest thing to real tortoiseshell they've tried. Not all 1.0 mm picks are created equal - this one feels light and the attack is relatively gentle as opposed to some other models/plastics eg the Nylon or Tortex. The triangle shape is a revelation, sitting somewhere between a traditional teardrop shape and a large flatpick. Makes rhythm parts smooth and effortless but still has enough of a point to get definition out of every note including lead parts. No worrying about where the pointed end is - they're all the same! Larger surface area helps maintain grip. I take plenty of spares but have yet to drop an Ultex pick!
N**O
Super High Quality Picks
I've been using Claytons for years but these have less string drag and last longer.
Y**4
Nice picks but very large.
I love the Dunlop Ultex picks and wanted to try something different. The sound is great from these but they are much larger than I thought. If you want a large pick that's super easy to hold these would be perfect, but for more precise picking I would recommend the Duncan Ultex regulars or sharps.
M**R
Very good for Mandolin
I'm always trying new picks as part of my effort to improve my tone. I keep coming back to these. They are easy to hold, nice and stiff. Not too pointy not too round. I feel that I have better volume with these as opposed to a standard "teardrop" shaped pick.
C**.
Happy
Really like this pick for lead.
S**P
My favorite pick size and material
The .73s are comparable to the Fender 346 Mediums in size and thickness and stiffness. THE BEST THING ABOUT THESE: The do NOT wear out. I mean, I've been gigging and practicing on electric with the same pick for YEARS now. Unbelievably durable. They may wear down if you're hard strumming an acoustic guitar. THE WORST THING ABOUT THESE: When you drop them, they disappear. Dunlop, you need to colorize them, if that doesn't negate the benefits of your formula. THE STANDARD THING ABOUT THESE: They have similar slippery/grip to most other smooth picks. Again, comparable to Fenders. WHY I LIKE THIS SIZE PICK: As more a rhythm guitarist, I find these big triangle shapes are the easiest to hold onto. You can lessen your grip on them without them flying out of your hand. It also makes it easier to hold the pick with three digits instead of two, which can come in handy at times. Not a problem to flip back and forth between two and three finger grip, so you can go from a three grip for rhythm to a two grip for soloing pretty easy. Also, three corners means you basically get three picks in one. Before I switched to the Ultex I was using Fender Mediums. Once one corner wore down, I'd just rotate to the next corner. But the Ultex material makes that moot, because it's just not wearing down.
R**L
Closest thing to tortoise shell
Way back before they were banned, I used tortoise shell picks. I still have a couple fragments of those (they would always eventually break). I've searched for years to find a material that had the same combination of just the right amount of stiffness and just the right amount of friction, and the Dunlop Ultex picks are the closest I've found. D'Addario Cortex picks seem to be the same material. Dunlop makes 0.60 and 0.73 thicknesses, D'Addario makes 0.50 and 0.70, so from those four it's pretty much personal taste (there are thicker available as well from both companies).
Q**O
Not bad.
Good quality, just not my desired preference.
R**D
son comodas al momento de tocar
A**R
Exactly what I wanted. I like the tri point picks for gripping.
F**I
Producto de muy buena calidad, recomendado, dureza corresponde a la descripcion
F**.
Love this pick for playing bass
D**S
Attention, bien que la description dise PACK DE 12, je n'ai reçu que 6 mediators
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