Move any sheet material that is under 280 lbs and fits into the slots.
Maximum slot is 1-1/4 inch, enough to fit 2 pieces of 5/8" drywall.
USE PLYWHEELS TO MOVE:
Plywood (of course)
Drywall
Press-board
Marble slabs
Picnic tables
Metal sheets
Cement Board for tile
Slots measure 1/2", 3/4", 1", and 1-1/4"
Maximum slot is 1-1/4 inch, enough to fit 2 pieces of 5/8" drywall.
USE PLYWHEELS TO MOVE:
Plywood (of course)
Drywall
Press-board
Marble slabs
Picnic tables
Metal sheets
Cement Board for tile
Slots measure 1/2", 3/4", 1", and 1-1/4"
Plywheels was made to make life easier.
Why I made Plywheels.
I was working at an event center, and every year at around Thanksgiving, we would put up an ice rink for the holidays. Under the ice was a layer of 3/4" plywood. Fun at the beginning, but at the end of January, when it came time to tear it down and move the wood back into storage (they wouldn't give me any help,) I had to move dozens of sheets back into storage by myself.
No big deal, except that after being under the ice for 2 months, they were waterlogged, weighed twice as much as dry wood, maybe weighed in at 100 lbs or so, but also they were slimy with mold and you couldn't get a grip on them. I basically needed to move dozens of sheets of plywood about 15 feet. I couldn't really lift them, and they were so slimy that i could barely get a grip to drag them, and dragging them wrecked the edges. I couldn't fit a large cart through the door or maneuver it in the room. I looked online to buy a small dolly to move 1 or 2 sheets of plywood, and though there were a few, they were really expensive. (there are a few choices now, but back then they were all like $100.) So I like so many people have done, I made my own little wood dolly.
Worked like a charm. Some of my co-workers saw my little cart and asked if I would make them one. The stone guy saw it and also asked me for one. He says he uses it to move marble slabs around his shop. The construction guy saw it and also asked me for one. I though "maybe I have something here." I have some friends that are engineers, so I showed a few of them what I wanted, and My buddy Eric from Schuh Fly Engineering designed what we have today. I found a manufacturer, and made 1000 of them. It took me 3 years to sell them all, but at the end of those 3 years, I was in 2 dozen stores, selling online, and have been approached by a very large hardware chain to carry them in all their stores.
So thanks for reading about us, I hope that our Plywheels makes your life easier
Why I made Plywheels.
I was working at an event center, and every year at around Thanksgiving, we would put up an ice rink for the holidays. Under the ice was a layer of 3/4" plywood. Fun at the beginning, but at the end of January, when it came time to tear it down and move the wood back into storage (they wouldn't give me any help,) I had to move dozens of sheets back into storage by myself.
No big deal, except that after being under the ice for 2 months, they were waterlogged, weighed twice as much as dry wood, maybe weighed in at 100 lbs or so, but also they were slimy with mold and you couldn't get a grip on them. I basically needed to move dozens of sheets of plywood about 15 feet. I couldn't really lift them, and they were so slimy that i could barely get a grip to drag them, and dragging them wrecked the edges. I couldn't fit a large cart through the door or maneuver it in the room. I looked online to buy a small dolly to move 1 or 2 sheets of plywood, and though there were a few, they were really expensive. (there are a few choices now, but back then they were all like $100.) So I like so many people have done, I made my own little wood dolly.
Worked like a charm. Some of my co-workers saw my little cart and asked if I would make them one. The stone guy saw it and also asked me for one. He says he uses it to move marble slabs around his shop. The construction guy saw it and also asked me for one. I though "maybe I have something here." I have some friends that are engineers, so I showed a few of them what I wanted, and My buddy Eric from Schuh Fly Engineering designed what we have today. I found a manufacturer, and made 1000 of them. It took me 3 years to sell them all, but at the end of those 3 years, I was in 2 dozen stores, selling online, and have been approached by a very large hardware chain to carry them in all their stores.
So thanks for reading about us, I hope that our Plywheels makes your life easier