Testing 3 Hand Trucks Vs the Ultimate Challenge - Honest Review

preview_player
Показать описание
The portable 2 wheeler, a stair climber, and the heavy weight champion. Which one is best for you? We test the 3 most popular designs on concrete, wood, and carpeted stairs and in the grass to see which comes out on top. This video is dedicated to those with mobility challenges who refuse to surrender.

Here are hand trucks and gear similar to the ones tested:

WARNING: This video is only for entertainment purposes. If you rely on the information portrayed in this video, you assume the responsibility for the results. Have fun, but always think ahead, and remember that every project you try is at YOUR OWN RISK.

Music: Broken - Patrick Patrikios

I'm an Amazon affiliate and clicking on the above link(s) provides a small percentage to the channel via Amazon at no additional cost to you. Thank you for your support.
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

I find it odd that in many of the hand truck promotion videos they never show using their hand trucks going up and down stairs, and that is what most people are most concerned about when they buy these things. Thanks for making this video! It gives lots of things to consider when buying one of these things.

tohrurikku
Автор

The six wheel is an amazing home tool that should be available for use in every home! I have steep cellar stairs and it works like a charm and I am 82 yrs of age!,

annmeyers
Автор

Okay. I really like this comparison. I especially liked the force gauge. That way you've got real data to show for the effort you'd need to lug around a bunch of stuff.

annjfk
Автор

My wife does massages in people's homes and that fidget spinner dolly is just the ticket to reduce her trips back and forth for things like her towels, sheets, and heater. Thanks for posting this, I appreciate it!

MarkusLaumann
Автор

They each have their place. It's a matter of budget, space and how one uses it for.

If you have a business or move a lot of heavy things around in a shop, garage, warehouse or some business for example, then the big heavy duty one.

If you just need one for occasional light duty moving then the two wheeled one would work. But forget about using stairs.

If you you want something to go up stairs or to cover your bases and are ok spending more for the flexibility then the fidget one for lighter duty or a more solid built one.

Even a cheap junk one would have it's place depending on what one's needs were.

bubbalo
Автор

amazing video ! thanks for taking the time to do this :)

RRebooted
Автор

Thanks for making this great video. I'm doing some r and d and this one video saves me so much time

nicholassaephanh
Автор

I'm torn today about going with a 881 pound electric stair climber dolly or one similar to your stair manual climber. The bottom line is I have a fairly steep pretty narrow L turn descent of stairs down from main floor to 12 foot deep basement in a 1950's built home. Will the landing to make the L is narrowed through a 29" door frame even if door is removed. And then steps go from enclosed carpeted stairs to OPEN no skirt under any of the steps down to the basement which is a pretty long run. Steps themselves are decent width or depth and length but there not closed so one can not use the baseboard or skirt to push against to make the next step up as you demonstrate with the stair climber here that's a manual. There are different styles of electric stair climbers too. One has tracks and several reviewers mention they can damage the edges of non covered or carpeted steps pretty bad. And though they are a few hundred dollars less than the fancy step up one I'm looking it they also do not carry as much either load rated on the steps. Another thing to watch out for is some sellers give a load rating but that's for flat surface use and it drops quite a bit when it comes to steps. And often the cheaper less expensive 150 to 100 price range for the smaller manual hand truck/dollies the wheels are first to fail. They just can't handle even half the weight they are suppose to manage on the steps or surface ground level. So I'm still leaning towards the super duper model that does not use a track and is electric and costs a bit over 1000 dollars the same I found for 1075 to 1115 today on Amazon dropped off around 300 give or take due to extended BLACK Friday sale prices. Over our 20 years in our older home we've had to remove and replace 5 full size electric water heaters. My husband is now 86 and I'm 5' and not nearly as strong as I was 20 even 10 years ago. So handling these beasts is really difficult. We also live in a rural area where we bring in our own bags of water softening salt and turns out we are both having more problems handling those too. Finally it's difficult in our area to find anyone to hire to help. Last handy man we did hire for a water pipe leak repair and my husband did most of the work 2 years ago also helped himself to a custom made cot mat and of course when confronted insisted he did not take it but also alluded to telling me you had 2 you could share. Mind you we paid him exactly what he asked for and at the time was nervous he said he was charging too much maybe he was one of those low self esteem people. I custom made the cot mats using not only new products but a 1800 cotton sheet no ironing needed which was inherited from his grandparents in the 70's and that had been an unused wedding present to them. Very heavy duty beautiful fabric you can not find today and never needed ironing. We used that on the upper sleep side of the mats and these were made to fit the over sized camp cots. I went to camp the next month after he'd been in our home and my husbands mat was missing. Mine is shorter for a smaller cot but my husband who's 6' has an 80" by 36" cot. I'm the one who camps more often over our 50 plus years of marriage. So the point of the story is we were ripped off and doing the math to remake another mat similar would cost over 200 dollars. I'm just sick of course as the sheet was special to my husband. We do not live beyond our means and many would say too frugal so we take the loss pretty personal. I'm leaning towards spending the 1000 plus towards the hand truck in hopes it keeps us managing our own affairs a few more years. We retired here in 2001 planning to be our forever home. Yes at that time we were quite a bit younger and thought we had a firm understanding of age issues to come. However the area lost over 40 percent of it's jobs since moving here and population has reduced and average age has increased so a lot of our neighbors and fellow area residences are facing similar situations. I'm not a fan of the electric monster perse. But again if we can avoid injuries at our age when we have to step up to the task due to no other options it may be money well spent. My only hesitation is how to store it and still get good use out of it for the monthly use of taking down 4-6 40 pounds of salt (by the way we have super hard water which is the problem behind the failed hot water tanks and we did look into replacements such as electric on demand types but were told by two different makers that it can't be done in this home. I will look into that again because I really have trouble making sense that it can't be installed here. But with 2 different hot water zones in this 3 upper stories of this house maybe they have a point. We've had problems we've worked around for plumbing in LP too but have succeeded with those. I refused to take no for an answer when we moved up here for that. )

lasinmt
Автор

Open stringer stairs are the challenge. There's nothing for wheels to push against going up .

kuehnel
Автор

Great video, I don't think you talk too much, LOL. I think you are very entertaining and informative. it kept my attention. question at the four: 30 mark You mentioned that aluminum is preferred over plastic. are you talking about the wheel itself in addition to the I don't know is that called the axle whatever the thing is the wheel is attached, which is definitely aluminum. I asked because other hand truck show wheels that have white plastic inside of the wheels. finally, do you have any opinion about the the bag itself? I will primarily be using this to carry groceries up my Brownstone concrete stairs thanks!

danapowell
Автор

Thanks for all the grate info in your video. It definitely helped me with my decision on what type oh hand cart would work for me.

marvinb
Автор

Thanks a lot for this video, fantastic. You seemed to handle 50 lbs with ease on the six wheeler. Do you think you could get twice the load (about 100 lbs or 45 kg) up stairs with it? That’s how much I’d need to be able to manage and I’ve yet to find a way to test it before buying. Thank you!

danieljanca
Автор

Do you know how to take the sliding vertical rails out of the lightweight green folding hand truck and re-install them? I use a truck just like that for moving stacks of tool boxes in and out of a workshop, and I want to put some metal rings around the rails to provide a moving anchor point for bungees, but I can't figure out how to take the rails off to put the rings on.

drengskap
Автор

You should have done one more test which would have been using these 3 on floating staircases Where there is open air space in between each step. I live in an [outdoor] apartment on the 2nd floor And I would love to find a stair climber that can work on those types of steps but I have yet to be able to find one.

natashal
Автор

I've got one that is sold with a cooler, easy to carry and I can shift bags of fertilizer etc with it.

jontaylor
Автор

I have concrete very much like these but the steps going up to my condo are very steep and none of these work on those stairs. 😕 I’m thinking a cart with extra large wheels

niccolea
Автор


Also the 6-wheel design makes pivoting corners much harder than 2-wheel. Had a hard time turning on narrow stairway that had 90 degree corner turns.

Battlemnk
Автор

Where do you get the water bottle crate❓

arlivialee
Автор

i got the fidget spinner trolley and im impressed with it

torquetheprisoner
Автор

2:15 Inner tubes are just terrible.There's a reason inner tubes were made obselete by tubeless tires 2 decades ago. Why don't I just go buy a horse and buggy while I'm out? Go to Amazon or Walmart and buy a $20 tire inflator that will fill these tires in under 10 seconds at your home. Work smarter not harder. You're welcome. This guy is scraping the bottom of the barrel with every excuse he could think up. Exactly what a shill would do. I've been using the same handtruck like this for 3 decades and never had a single issue other than putting air in the tires once in a while. These aluminum/plastic handtrucks won't last you a year, and won't be able to handle even a third as much weight.

rdGemini