SafeRacks Golf Equipment Organizer Rack White
$39.99
$119.99
67% off
Reference Price
Condition: New
Color: White
style: Industrial
Top positive review
Keeps golf stuff neat and orderly
By ParamotorPilot on Reviewed in the United States on November 12, 2024
Solid. Easy to assemble ... follow the instructions. Keeps our golf stuff contained and organized. A win.
Top critical review
8 people found this helpful
Assembling this thing could be used by the CIA as an "Enhanced Interrogation Technique"
By Deon Garrett on Reviewed in the United States on July 4, 2020
I'll give it two stars because I'm sure that if you hate yourself enough to assemble it, it would be nice. Much like, if I were to rate horses, I'd probably give a unicorn three stars. From drawings I've seen, unicorns seem like they'd be pretty good as horses. But alas, if you're shopping for horses, you're not going to find a unicorn, and it seems like the fact that they don't exist should affect the rating a bit. Likewise, you're not going to make a golf rack out of this box of parts. It just isn't going to happen. You could perhaps use the steel poles as a weapon and steal someone else's better designed golf rack, but that's really it.There are no screws, bolts, or nuts. Every joint is just a pole going through a hole that's much larger than the pole. Obviously, that wouldn't hold anything together, so you have a bag full of plastic sleeves. You put a sleeve around the pole, and now that part of the pole is much *larger* than the hole it goes through. If you jam it in anyway, it's going to be a very tight fit, and it's the tightness of the fit that holds the whole thing together. It takes maybe 1000 pounds of force to insert one of these friction sleeves into the hole it goes in, and 1 pound of force to dislodge it from the groove that's supposed to keep it from just sliding up the pole instead of going through the hole.Suppose you wanted your car to be completely stuck in your garage. You could wrap the car in thick plastic so that it's larger than opening of your garage door and then drive it in. That's what you're trying to do here. Problem is, the plastic is held to your car by a much weaker bond than the force required to jam the whole thing into the garage, so inevitably, you're just going to drive your car in the garage while the plastic stays outside. On the off chance you get it to work, congratulations, you only have to repeat it 40 more times.Other people seem to have successfully put this thing together. Maybe the one leg I spent 90 minutes on before just throwing the box of parts away was defective. Anyway, I'll take their word for it, because faking reviews for a golf rack seems like a really weird next step for Russia's disinformation campaign to take. But I can't fathom how it would ever be worth messing with this thing when other options exist.
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