🚶‍♂️ Step into freedom with Carex!
The Carex Lightweight Folding Walker is a portable mobility aid designed for seniors and adults, featuring adjustable height settings from 30 to 37 inches, a sturdy aluminum frame that supports up to 300lbs, and a lightweight design for easy transport and storage.
C**.
Very sturdy. Good price
Sturdy & strong. Helps me get around safely and independently. Helps getting up and down, can go up & down one step without help. Easy to put together, just a few pieces to snap together. Folds easily. Very light. Good price too. I thought I should mention a few things that make it easier for me to get around. I added wheels to the front and ski glides to the back. This was an inexpensive addition and helps me move a little faster while still maintaining balance. I talked about going up and down a step. This has been so helpful in maintaining my independence. Curbs obviously don’t have railings and I sometimes have to walk far to find a ramp. Steps sometimes don’t have a railing or often only have one which makes it difficult and unsafe when you are experiencing issues with pain, strength and/or balance. Now I can walk right up to the curb or step, put the walker up on the curb/step and climb up or put it down at ground level and step down and use the walker to support me like a railing. There are very helpful YouTube videos that helped me make sure I was doing this safely. I can also get in and out of my car by myself. I can push myself up onto the seat and use the steering wheel to help guide me into the car. The walker is so light that I can easily lift it in or out of the car by myself. I slide it in the car and place it upside down on the passenger side. It fits securely on the floor and I don’t have to worry about it sliding around and becoming dangerous or difficult for me to reach. Getting out is easier for me because my car is elevated a little bit and I can put the walker on the ground and lean on it to step down. I have used it in other people’s cars that are lower to the ground and I have needed help to pull myself up. I have also purchased a “door cane” that fits into the door latch and becomes a handle that gives you support to get in or out of the car. It is very helpful. This walker has also helped me in restrooms. In public restrooms one safety rail isn’t enough for me and most people don’t have a safety rail in their home bathroom. I found that carefully turning the walker around and pushing it all the way back against the toilet tank turns it into a safety rail. This allows me to safely sit and stand while holding on to the arms of the walker. I hope this helps someone, no matter which walker you choose. But I have had this walker for over a year now and it has remained strong and has allowed me to maintain my independence and safely navigate the challenges in my life.
K**S
Sturdy, lightweight- does the job. Perfect for after leg surgery!
Have been using for a week after Achilles surgery- am in a heavy cast and am non-weight-bearing for several weeks. Wanted something to give me some stability when going from the bed to the bathroom and it’s worked great for that- makes me feel safer than using my crutches. Also using it for something to hold onto getting up from sitting position and something to hold onto getting in/out of the shower. Feels pretty durable- wobbles just a little. Easily adjusted for my height. Hubs put it together in about 2 minutes with no instructions. So far so good. I’ve been using it for about 10 days. Pretty lightweight too which is nice. Grips on the handles are comfortable. Good grips on the feet as well. Overall I’m really happy with the purchase and it’s made surgery recovery much easier.
R**L
good sturdy walker
easy to build. its very sturdy i tested it before giving to my mother
F**.
DO NOT BUY -- Buy the other brand, and keep your fingers crossed
So far, I have bought three (ground floor, upstairs, basement)The first two came with assembly instructions. The second one had a minor defect that, at first, made it hard to assemble, but we managed (one leg seems to be a bit shorter, but the thing is sturdy and I weigh less than 160 lbs.The third one arrived today. No instructions whatsoever, and (on the side marked 4) I cannot manage to assemble it; I am probably not strong enough. I am sure my son will manage (he is coming Sunday). Then, I will have a sturdy walker on each floor (very useful if you are old and somewhat wobbly -- I fell a couple of days ago and it still hurts).Before ordering the third one, I wondered whether I should order the other brand; price difference: about one dollar, mine costing more, although the other has more reviews (the 'other' is the Drive Medical, $38.99 and over 34,000 reviews. Mine is the Carex: current price $39.99, but only $32.99 last December, when, one at a time, I bought the first two.My advice: buy the other one, the Drive Medical, especially if you need one on each floor (and buy only one at a time). The one I received today, judging from the lack of packaging and assembly instructions, is an item that someone else returned (too hard or impossible to assemble? especially for an older woman -- not everyone has a strong son to fix things).What if my son cannot assemble it? At 89, I no longer drive, so returning it would mean asking someone to do it for me. [Or I could just throw it away, like the Bay Alarm Medical alert system I could not manage to set up, and then was told that I had not bought it, just leased it (and they said they would bill me for $299 unless I returned it -- within 21 days ! What would you do? -- Do they know how tempting it is to just take a hammer and get even with the thing? Even at 89, an angry woman will have enough strength! ... and damn the money!)-----Update, April 1st,2024My son was unable to finish assembling the walker. In one corner, the top will not fit into the bottom until the yellow dot shows. Diagnosis: half the left side of the walker is out of alignment, so that it cannot be fully assembled.This walker came in a cardboard box [right size box, marked 'Compass Health' with a CAREX label stuck on. The 'original packaging' (as seen in the previous two walkers I had bought) was missing, and so where the 'assembly instructions'.]My conclusion: The item I received had been 'previously owned' and returned, probably because it could not be assembled. In other words: I ordered a NEW item and received a DEFECTIVE RETURN. Cost to me: $42.39, tax included. Let's tell everybody: IF A DEFECTIVE ITEM IS RETURNED, AMAZON SENDS IT TO ANOTHER CUSTOMER. [= Amazon has no shame]Asking for a replacement would mean writing to Amazon (on my own; lawyers are expensive), convincing them that they did wrong; repackaging and returning the defective item, and then hoping that the replacement is not also defective, one way or another; all that will take time ... and money. Meanwhile, if I fall while doing my laundry, I am very much on my own.I am 89 and no longer drive. To return the defective second-hand item I was sent, as I already said, would be a hassle (repackaging, standing on line at the post office to send it back, writing to Amazon to explain, etc...)Worth it? I doubt it.What can I do? Simple: let everyone know that buying from Amazon is risky, forget my loss, and buy somewhere else. If we all do that whenever Amazon steps out of line, things may change. In the end, we may win.
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