The packaging that holds the screws and bolts etc has the toughest glue holding them in the packaging the world has ever seen. Think I’ll like this thing though after getting it put together.
Word of warning from my use case. I have owned this thing for about two weeks and have put it through light use at worst - dumping about 12 loads of dirt and, the cotter pin came out from the handle bar and is now lost somewhere in the yard. I dont know if this is a design flaw in the handle system but you may want to be aware of making sure the pin stays in when youre rotating it around or picking it up to hang it up/dump a load out.
That probably just comes down to personal preference. They look very similar. The gorilla cart appears to have a unique dumping system from what I’ve observed.
@@therustichandyman How far will the dump rotate? Does it go between the wheels so you go past 90 degrees to get that last little bit of dirt out? Thanks, loved the video presentation.
I'm debating the same thing. I like that the gorilla cart can dump past 90 degrees. But I like the slots on the kobalt you can place a shower or other tools in there
The packaging that holds the screws and bolts etc has the toughest glue holding them in the packaging the world has ever seen. Think I’ll like this thing though after getting it put together.
@@pjs5191 I thought the same thing!
Wow. You are so so amazing! I am overwhelmed! Your mother must be so proud. You assembled a cart for us dummies!
thank you.
good video, thanks. good camera work. I am about to put this together.
achei muito legal o canal por isso assinei, very nice
Word of warning from my use case. I have owned this thing for about two weeks and have put it through light use at worst - dumping about 12 loads of dirt and, the cotter pin came out from the handle bar and is now lost somewhere in the yard. I dont know if this is a design flaw in the handle system but you may want to be aware of making sure the pin stays in when youre rotating it around or picking it up to hang it up/dump a load out.
Thanks for the heads up!
Very good video. I would suggest putting the handle pin in from the top down. This way if the retention clip comes loose, the pin won't just fall out.
I ended up buying a thicker gauge cotter pin that has an additional locking groove on it from Lowes and I haven't had the slippage problem anymore.
I love it
how do you inflate the tires? Mine is almost flat and need to put some air.
@@leavemealonetoUS you can use an air compressor or a bike tire pump.
@@leavemealonetoUS you could use a bike tire pump or an air compressor.
Is it heavy to pull going up somewhere steep?
@@Chuyv88 it’s easy to pull, but probably weighs about 35 pounds empty.
So the obvious question... this or the Gorilla 7cuft is best?
That probably just comes down to personal preference. They look very similar. The gorilla cart appears to have a unique dumping system from what I’ve observed.
@@therustichandyman How far will the dump rotate? Does it go between the wheels so you go past 90 degrees to get that last little bit of dirt out?
Thanks, loved the video presentation.
@@thisoldjeepcj5 this should help answer your question I hope! th-cam.com/users/shortsuSwhhnNHDGU?si=0TWtKqhYcF90Yn_d
I'm debating the same thing. I like that the gorilla cart can dump past 90 degrees. But I like the slots on the kobalt you can place a shower or other tools in there
Missed opportunity with the shallow sides.
Does have side holes to make a fence. If you are going to a junk yard for parts, would deep sides be ideal? I'm wondering how Gorilla compares.
You're going to want to replace those juuuuunk pneumatic tires/wheels with the solid 'no flat' ones.