❄️ Push Winter Away with Power and Ease!
This 26-inch heavy-duty snow shovel features an adjustable 48-52 inch aluminum handle with padding, a wide 26" metal blade for efficient snow removal, and pivoting polypropylene wheels for smooth maneuvering. Designed to reduce back strain with an ergonomic pushing angle, it’s built to last and backed by a 1-year warranty.
C**S
Ladies & Gents save your back 💃🏻🕺🏻🤳🏻 get this!!!
The media could not be loaded. I ordered this on Amazon, received it quickly, in two days, my husband put it together in 10mins.We just cleared our driveway 2-3” of snow. ❄️ ⛄️In CO Sorings. My husband used a regular shovel 😅and a vinyl sheet, and I used this snow pusher shovel without back pain! Easy peasy! 💃🏻👌🏼We have a looong, inclined driveway and thisCASI 26” heavy duty snow shovel performed perfectly 👌🏼it gets a bit stuck on the cement cracks like any snow shovel but it is much easier to use. I can push it with one hand. Unbelievable!!! Makes the shoveling fun. Happy customer.❄️ ⛄️❄️Thank you to the makers for this great invention.🏆
D**M
Really great for about 4 inches of snow or less
Really, really liked this because of the tremendous ease of moving snow on a big driveway or patio. You do have to plan where you’re going to put the snow and you may want to have a standard snow shovel to pile the snow up in a convenient place. We did use it during a large snowstorm. We went out twice and cleared off our large patio, but it’s so easy to move the snow that going out twice was not tiring at all. Was very easy to put together. Would definitely recommend it to anyone who had a large driveway or patio to shovel.
D**D
better than a shovel
Although I've owned this for over a year, we finally had a snowstorm where I could put this to the test. A bit of a background: I live in-town on a corner lot; so there is about 150' of sidewalk that needs to be cleared after a snowstorm. As a senior female, I tend to shovel at about 2" so the lifting is not too difficult. I've been shoveling my walkway for almost 40 years, and actually enjoy it - but over the past few years, I am finding it more difficult so I bought this mini plow in the hopes it would make the job a bit easier - since lifting the snow was the most difficult part for me. First, assembling it was fairly straight forward and not difficult. Not a five-minute job but probably less than 40 for me. The first snowfall was the wet kind: not deep, but super heavy. I'd have to say it made the job easier - no lifting - but not the shovel's greatest strengths. Because it cannot be angled or turned in any way, there was no way to push the snow off to the side of the sidewalk - and you can't walk 20' feet without at least pushing it off to the side; which this shovel cannot do. Instead, you have to wrangle it to get it to face the grass so you can push the snow onto it. Not super easy. Again, even though it was not easy - it was a bit better than lifting the wet snow. Next snowstorm was its shining glory. Soft snow; about 3-4" deep. Super easy. However, I am also confident it would not have been so difficult with a standard shovel either. So, final impressions: it does help reduce the strain on the back, but it doesn't make the job a walk-in-the park. Ideal situation: a straight, paved driveway. It is fairly well made. I am not super confident it will stand the test of many years; I'm concerned the blade will chip over time and not be able to make a clean scrape. But, for occasional light duty, it helps.
A**R
Falls Apart Faster Than the Snow Melts
This thing is an absolute joke. Right out of the box, I had a bad feeling about it, and I was right. No matter how tight you screw everything in, the bolts and screws loosen up almost instantly. I’d tighten them down as hard as I could, and within minutes of pushing snow, it was like the whole thing was actively trying to disassemble itself.I figured maybe I just got a bad one, but nope .... turns out my neighbor a few houses down has the same model, and guess what? Mid-snowstorm, their plow fell apart on them too. One second they were clearing their driveway, the next they were standing there holding pieces of this thing like a broken toy.The design is beyond cheap. The metal is flimsy, the screws won’t stay in place, and overall, this is one of the most frustrating pieces of equipment I’ve ever wasted money on. If you enjoy repeatedly stopping to reassemble your tools in freezing temperatures, this is the product for you. Otherwise, do yourself a favor and buy something that isn’t held together by sheer hope and frustration.1/10, can't clear snow
M**D
Good for light snow, light duty, requires some practice
We go up to our cabin weekly and during the winter snow falls and we need quick clear of the driveway.The GOOD:-Easy to put together with minimal tools, good instructions with pictures-Easy to use after some practice, see the not so good below-light to roll, carry and handle-Clears light snow faster than shoveling, about 2" fluffy snow max pushThe NOT SO GOOD-Cheap materials, plastic shovel with a very thin aluminum lip at the bushiness end, and very lightweight and thin handle; the whole thing feels like it will break if it hits ice or a rock. Would be greatly improved by an aluminum shovel slightly offset to the side to push and dump without having to back up.-Wheels are awful, really would improve the whole tool to have solid rubber wheels and perhaps even studded rubber wheels. The wheels are hollow plastic and just ride above the snow, slipping often and not "digging in" at all, this makes it...-Hard to maneuver and too lightweight for clearing a decent path, except for fluffy snow no more than 2" thick. If just pushing along the shovel gets full, the whole tool stops dead and/or the shovel dumps the load and the wheels ride on the snow you just pushed.After some practice this tool does clear the snow faster than shoveling, one tiny swath at a time. Learn how much snow you can push, dig in the shovel slightly and just push with your legs like a hand mower. It is best to clear snow at an angle rather than try to clear a whole driveway straight (like the car). Start the dig and push no more than 3 feet from the "dump" site like the edge of the drive. To dump, stop pushing and back up or lift slightly and back up.After the ease of the push method, I will be looking for a heavier duty push shovel like this one, perhaps one with aluminum shovel and slightly tilted to shovel to the side rather than in a straight path; also one with definitely better quality wheels.
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