🚶♂️ Elevate Your Mobility Experience!
The North American Health + Wellness Walker Tray is a versatile accessory that transforms any standard mobility walker into a stable tabletop. With features like two drink holders, a non-slip surface, and a raised lip to prevent spills, this tray enhances convenience and safety. Proudly made in the USA, it measures 21 inches in length, making it a perfect fit for your mobility needs.
C**Y
too small
it is real nice but it does not fit my mom's walker. What do I need to do to replaces it since is not returnable?please advice, thank you!
G**E
False advertisement
It says fits any walker, it does not fit any walker it should state which walkers it fits because the hole that fits over the handle is not the width it should be to grab the handles. It does not slide all the way down over the handles.
S**N
This nice tray fits on a walker for a handicapped persons convenience.
We got this for my 94 year old Mother-in-Law when she fell recently and broke her hip. I believe that it will help her a great deal when She is released from patient care. She has used it previously, but I can't recall the details at the moment. It is well made and fits over the armrests on a wheelchair to provide a stable place to eat, read and drink a beverage, etc.I may soon get one for myself as I am handicapped and recently was given medication that made me dizzy enough to the walker that I have from previous incidents that made me unsteady; a bad drug interaction, an Auto accident that broke my neck and back...I believe that this could be of use to a great number of people using a wheelchair, or with extra care, a walker.
G**L
Fits on Invacare 6240-5F
The tray fits well on an Invacare walker, model 6240-5F. The side holes barely fit over the widest parts of the handgrips, and there is enough elasticity to the plastic at the outer edges to allow the tray to be set down over the handles easily. The tray does not fit down all the way to the horizontal frame members on the walker or even the screws on the frame, perhaps by design. The tray is pressed down until the front and rear ends of the slots encounter the vertical tubes of the walker's handles. As noted by others, the tray can tilt forward or aft, according to how level it is placed over the handles. Once in contact with the frame tubes and positioned level, pressing firmly downward lets the tray stay as positioned by friction. As for the drink cup holes, they are positioned directly over the stay-open braces on the walker frame, limiting how far down a drink container can go. The vertical distance from the braces to the top of the holes in the plastic tray is 1.5" Several different size glasses were tried. A big coffee mug would not fit in the holes, but would rest on the tray itself. Narrower glasses fit well enough. Still, moving the walker/tray assembly should be done carefully to avoid sloshing liquid from a cup, whether in the holes or on the tray.
S**T
Perfectly adequate. Sizing hit-or-miss.
We ended up with 2 of these where I work in a group home setting. The cup holders seem useless to me as the holes are too small for any cups the residents using it have, but they might work well for someone else, or with a bit of modification. It fit perfectly on the walker of one resident with no issues, and not well on another. For the second one we will have to do some modification to make it work. It is very hit-or-miss in that department. Overall, I rate it a 5-star because it makes life infinitely easier for the residents with walkers to carry things in the kitchen or across the house. One resident leaves it on the walker and uses it as a desk of sorts for doing crafts while watching television. I honestly wish we had gotten them sooner.
D**Y
Not bad, but I'd watch for version 2.0
The idea is great, but the execution leaves room for improvement.The one-size-fits-all approach doesn't work so well when the flat surface can tip too easily when a user is walking with a tray in place. It doesn't drop low enough to fit tightly on the handles, so when a user puts their hands on the handles to walk, they tend to push on the tray and cause it to shift.The holes for the cups seem like a great idea -- but their placement ends up being right above the locking clips, so the cups can't drop as low into the holes as they are meant to (your mileage may vary based on the walker style you have). Positioning these a little further back (or even next to the handle areas) might have made them more usable (and offered the ability to let the user stabilize the cup b extending their thumbs off the handle grips.I also didn't like the way the back of the tray (on the side of the user's legs) was a straight edge. The user can't get very close to the walker and has to walk at an awkward angle to prevent hitting the ray (and tilting it). If the manufacturer had design it with a curved edge it would have allowed the user to step closer to the walker.Over all, this is a great concept -- it just needs some design improvements.
B**E
Provides Some Independence
This is a great tray to fit over the walker handles. After my husband's partial hip replacement, he had to use a walker for several weeks. Once he got this tray he could carry his own stuff around with him. Because of his walker style, he had to turn the tray around so a drink would fit in the holder.And it works as a great tray just to carry stuff.
T**Y
Does not fit walker
Does not fit walker securely. One would think that one size fits all, but it doesnt. The tray does not sit level or securely. Hard to fit hands onto hand pieces with tray in place. Really its unusable and beware its NOT RETURNABLE.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 month ago