🚀 Move It Like a Pro!
The Rhino Cart All Terrain Mover is a heavy-duty dolly designed for moving appliances, furniture, and building materials with a remarkable 2,000lb load capacity. Featuring 8 durable urethane wheels, it effortlessly navigates uneven surfaces and expands to accommodate large items, all while being proudly made in the USA.
Item Dimensions L x W x H | 18"L x 4.75"W x 29"H |
Item Weight | 8 Pounds |
Material Type | Alloy Steel, Resin |
Style Name | Commercial,Heavy Duty,Heavy-duty,Industrial,Usa |
Color | Yellow, Black |
Load Capacity | 2000 Pounds |
Number of Wheels | 8 |
Wheel Type | Polyurethane |
D**D
Citrus LIFESAVER - absolutely amazing product - already looking to buy more!
If I could give it more than 5 stars I would! Such an awesome product design that is light and easy to use out of the box!This season we have had a few freezes where our potted patio citrus would have certainly died had they not been brought in from the cold. The first 2 times it took two of us struggling significantly to get our largest pots over - even with dedicated pot “skates” rated to 1000 lbs. 2 skates broke after 2 uses. In comes our most recent freeze. I was now on my own to figure out how to move them. ANSWER - RHINO CART! I’m 5’6 with an average frame and I was able to move the two largest pots (3.5 feet tall by 3.5 diameter) onto the cart. I used two square pieces of plywood to fit between the two lipped rollers and pivoted the plants on. I was able to navigate them over bumpy patio pebble concrete, inclines, 3 different 6 inch “bumps” and up a lipped garage door threshold with absolute ease.RHINO CART - you saved our citrus!
M**J
How do people break these?
The media could not be loaded. After a month, I've now put mine through the paces before I wrote a review. I'm an out of shape 52 yr old that moves 300lb equipment for a living so I need every tool in my arsenal I can find :)I was very reluctant to purchase due to a couple reviews saying it "broke within 2 minutes" and similar. I just want to ask, seriously, what are doing to these things? IDK maybe there are quality control issues and I just got a "good" one. But they seem pretty darn sturdy to me, and I uploaded a video to prove what I do with them. Of course purposely going over an uneven sewer drain isn't my daily routine, but I needed a location that showed obstacles I "may" run into at times. But the van's liftgate is definitely used often.One weak spot may be the springs that hold the bars to the "fixed" side. I could see with some twisting those could break over time, but so far so good.There is also a lot of discussion about the weight limit. I wrote the owner/inventor and and very quickly got this reply:"The first round of testing that the engineers did demonstrated a constant load bearing of at least 1,100 pounds. As we keep testing the product under varying terrains, load types and temperatures the product keeps demonstrating increased capabilities. The product is currently certified to 1,500 pounds. The packaging and associated items will be updated once that stock is depleted. Additionally, for the past several months we have been testing the Rhino Cart at 2,000 pounds (1-ton). The data has shown no flaws in the cart. Therefore, it appears that we will be increasing the carts official load bearing to 1-ton before the end of this year. The packaging inventory will need to once again be depleted before the updates are made. The markings on the cart itself will be changed at the end of this year also.In the interim, beginning next month a label will be attached to each cart informing the customer of the updated weight range"Makes prefect sense, and shows how easily others make assumptions. However the obvious improvement here would be for them to state this in the Amazon description.Aside from all that, I personally would need to see it with my own eyes to believe this would move a 800 lb safe on anything but perfectly flat smooth concrete. But also folks, this is a TOOL. Every tool made has it's uses and limitations. Maybe for examples it will move 1 ton in ideal laboratory conditions, but only 600lbs across uneven blacktop. That's still impressive to me!One problem I did run into quickly - it's too wide for my use case which is various doctor offices, some of which have only 30" interior doors. The cart at 29 inches wide doesn't leave much room for error. So I took a Dremel metal disk to the bars on the side that moves. I cut the outer bars 2.5 inches, the inner bars at 3 inches (when you see how it's made, you know the inner bar must be a little shorter). Worked out great since I rarely need more than 24 inches wide. But it's great I can still make it wider for the rare occasions.Overall highly recommend as another tool.
G**R
Don't use alone if you can help it
First of all, I bought it specifically to move my gun safe from out of a cargo trailer into a house. Let me say that it had zero problems rolling with that weight on it. The negative was that there is no way to break that roll if it wants to go while on an incline. I could have been seriously hurt or worse so have backup on hand if you are moving something that could tilt and take your ass out. Once I got it all of the way inside to where I wanted to put it I had to figure out how to get that gun safe off of the dolly without getting hurt as well. It is off now and I'm licking my wounded pride. Every little bump, such as the door jambs, was ridiculous as well. There was no all terrain movement happening. I had to literally tilt the damn gun safe and risk getting run over for each side at each doorway. I'm going to be bringing in a sectional in a little while and hopefully that will be less traumatizing because I am pretty brusied up by the entire gunsafe move as it is. I'm not too sure how I want to rate this thing yet as my nerves are shot dafuk out.
K**U
The Last Heavy Appliance Dolly You'll Ever Need!
Not only have I moved a lot, I've also moved all my own stuff each time. I even own my own moving van, so the need to move and have dollies is way old hat for me. After recently remodeling my kitchen and installing porcelain tiles over a wooden subfloor, I was concerned about my usual dollies and the potential damage to the floor moving a huge and very heavy refrigerator across the newly tiled floor and into its space.I discovered this tool by pure chance, and boy, oh boy, am I glad I did!Delicate floors? No problem!Tight spaces? No problem at all!Very heavy weight? No issues at all!Beyond a shadow of a doubt, this is the best moving tool I've ever owned for close quarters, very heavy items, and not having a crew to move things. We've since moved heavy ovens, ranges, refrigerators and various unruly boxes. In each case, the ease of operation and move is remarkable.I recommend this tool without any reservations whatsoever.
주**형
Follow the manual!!
It’s an excellent product, but never use it without the pole. Without the pole, the cart will tilt and inevitably collapse.
L**A
Total Regret
It's absolutely not all-terrain as the wheels do not turn. The wheels locked at every turn and made moving impossible. It's very light weight and does not have the design or built to handle heavy duty jobs which is why we bought it. It is very compact but unfortunately useless. Broke on first use. Save your money and make a better purchase as there's little value for your money.
B**Y
Does not have locking poles. False advertisement.
The video describes having twist locks on the extension poles. There are none. When you try to pull the skates apart, the poles come with it and will just pull apart. It does work well on slightly rough surfaces but not having the locking poles is a big downfall.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 month ago