🌿 Get ready to roll with style and ease!
This Durable Plastic Garden Wagon Utility Cart features a spacious 37" L x 20" W bed, a robust 300-pound weight capacity, and removable side racks for versatile hauling. Equipped with 4" x 10" pneumatic tires, it ensures a smooth ride across various outdoor surfaces. The fold-under handle allows for compact storage, making it a practical choice for any gardener.
W**S
Light duty –Sturdy enough and great to use
Our local nursery uses this wagon for customers buying plants. Works well there, so I got this one for home use. Mostly plastic so it's light weight, but also light duty. I can fill it with plants or 2-3 bags of bark / planting mix and it does just fine. The handle stays upright on its own, but doesn't lock in that position. A small bungee would keep it there. The removable sides are reasonably strong to keep things in the wagon. They are all connected at the corners for strength, so it's all or nothing for using the sides. You would not use the sides for tying anything down. The wagon rolls easily and stays steady while turning. Very easy to use around home & neighborhood.
D**.
Those rails...
Bought it for travel softball. It's well made; has plenty of room and strength to tote chairs, equipment, a small pitching machine, etc. 10" pneumatic tires are much better than the thin hard rubber wheels found on the collapsible wagons most often seen at travel softball tournaments. Only performance issue is that the China-made tires wobble a bit, making it sound like a train when being pulled. Aside from that it works great. The plastic construction makes it light, strong, and resistant to corrosion. Easy to lift in and out of the bed of my pickup. Now for my real problem... travel softball is full of tough little 9-10 year old girls wearing flashy uniforms and cool Demarini gadgets, and I thought this wagon would fit in with its Farm-Tuff label and obvious portrayal of a John Deere tractor, but with the bright rails, as functional and sturdy as they are, the wagon looks like something made by Fisher Price for toddlers. Not really conducive to that travel softball look. I'm trying to figure what to do with that, maybe paint the rails black or replace them with sections of marine poly board. Open to ideas if anyone wants to comment. But that didn't affect my score; this wagon is much better than the metal ones I've seen due to weight alone and great for what most people buy it to do. I would definitely recommend it.
R**.
I love this wagon!
This is a great wagon. It's very sturdy and well made. Made in Canada.The wagon can be used with or without the side rails. The yellow side rails are removable: no fasteners to undo; just lift them out of the notches in the top of the green wagon sides.Assembly was very easy.I have not had the wagon long enough to comment on longevity.Cleaning is simple since the wagon can be hosed off and dried in the sun or with a cloth.I have taken the wagon on flat surfaces (grass lawn, paved driveway) as well as over sloping, rougher pasture areas. The wagon has not tipped over even when loaded.If you install the handle backwards (I wasn't paying attention and did this initially) and don't put the sides on, it makes for a fun ride that you can steer from the bed of the wagon. I'm nearly 50 so I was just reminiscing back to my childhood days of riding in a Radio Flyer wagon for a bit. I did reinstall the handle the correct way. And if you do try this, please remember to be safe. ;-)EDIT: July 2017: I'm still using this wagon regularly after over three years and I still love it. It is such a handy item to have around.EDIT: March 2021: Still using this wagon and I still love it. It's so handy to have. I did replace a couple tires, but otherwise it's still my favorite gardening/ yard work tool.EDIT: July 2023: The wagon is still great and I've used it so much over the past 9.5 years. I've replaced three tires so far with flat-free tires.
B**N
Horse Show Utility Cart
I bought this to use to haul things to and from my trailer during horse shows. It's perfect for that. The sides are super easy to put in or take out, and you can put any combination of 1 2 3 or 4 rails in. The handle folds all the way underneath the cart between the wheels for travel / storage. The cart seems quite sturdy, and rolls easily - the handle is plenty long for me at 5'9 and I would imagine a taller person would have no troubles with it either. It's big enough to fit a full bale of hay with just the back rail down and about 2 flakes hanging over the edge... after I unload at the shows I just leave the hay in the cart and feed out of it, saves a lot of wasted hay!
A**N
The wagon looks well made.
It is almost entirely plastic, including the axle supports and steering linkage. Only the axles and fastening hardware are metal. Fasteners are steel machine screws with Nylock hex nuts. The front wheels pivot on two short stub axles, not on a single central pivot. They turn about 45 degrees left and right [turning circle: 8-1/2 ft.]. While the front axles are solid steel, the rear axle is a hollow tube. All are 5/8 inch diameter. Each painted steel wheel is fitted with two sealed ball bearings and a 3-1/2 in. wide tire [30 PSI max.]. I suspect they have inner tubes, but cannot be sure. I am wary of light duty pneumatic tires because they always seem to be flat when I need to use them, but I will hope for the best. The wagon bed is 20 in. x 37 in. inside and 3-1/2 in. deep. The outer dimensions are 22 in. x 39 in.[ not counting the handle] x 16 in. high. The side racks make it a total of 23 in. high. The side racks are assembled from yellow plastic slats joined by internal vertical wooden stakes [1/2 x 1-1/2 in. maple] that project from the bottom and fit into sockets in the wagon sides. Each uppermost slat firmly interlocks with its adjoining neighbor at each corner [insert long racks first, short racks last]. There are no drain holes in the wagon bed, but they could be easily drilled if needed. The only assembly required is to attach the wheels to the axles and attach the handle to the wagon tongue. Each wheel is held on its axle by a plastic cap and a steel cotter pin passing through both the axle and cap. You will need long nose pliers to bend the ends of the cotter pins. The handle fastens with a single steel machine screw through the tongue and through a pair of plastic bushings, requiring a ½ inch wrench for the hex nut and a 3/16 inch square drive or large flat screwdriver.For more information, the manufacturer's number is 1-866-449-4343.
N**E
Solid wagon
Rock solid wagon. Impervious to sunlight and rain damage.Handle is a little short.
W**S
it is plastic, not steel so think about its intended use.
it is weather proof it was adequate for pulling 200lbs of steel product up an 8 foot ramp several times. it is weather proof, light and somewhat flexible.
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