






🚛 Move Heavy, Move Smart — The Rhino Cart Means Business
The Rhino Cart All Terrain Mover is a heavy-duty appliance dolly designed for professionals who demand strength and versatility. With a 2,000 lb load rating, 8 rugged urethane wheels, and an adjustable width from 6" to 46", it effortlessly handles furniture, appliances, and building materials across any terrain. Made in the USA with patented technology, this award-winning dolly combines industrial-grade materials and smart design to make heavy moving tasks smoother and faster.



| Brand | All Terrain Mover |
| Color | Yellow |
| Item Weight | 8 Pounds |
| Material | Alloy Steel , Resin |
| Product Dimensions | 18"L x 4.75"W x 29"H |
| Style | Commercial,Heavy Duty,Heavy-duty,Industrial,Usa |
K**K
Worth Every Dollar and Cent!(Moved 800 lb safe with ease)
I wanted to build a large 6un safe into my new house, but there is one problem: how does one guy move an 800 lb drop-shipped safe over 70 feet through the house and not hurt himself or his wife, damage the safe, tip it over, run over the dogs, etc.? Well, with a little brain and brawn, sheer grit, and some research into the right tools, and putting his engineering degree to work and here you go! I will say that I was skeptical when I started because most didn't review a safe move but more appliances, but when I looked at spending $500-800 to pay a mover, I knew that I could do this and have new tools to help future projects......but the most critical piece was the Rhino cart because if it broke under it I was toast and the safe would fall over more than likely and damage something! I figured that I could jack it up enough and clear out the shipping supports, and I could then lower it and move it, and that's what I did. Below were the steps that I took: 1) Build frame under safe screwing in jacks and across both sides to one another 2) Use Sawzall and out widthwise 1x4 supports one at a time 3) Open the safe door slightly and slowly 4) unscrew the lag bolts inside from the leftover wood substructure 5) Slide under the rhino cart and position it centered 6) Close the safe door on loose straps, pulling the excess strap up as you close. 7) Tighten the straps down over the rear of the safe to the Rhino cart, pulling it up to the bottom of the safe(off the ground) 8)Incrementally jack up each jack 1 click per time per corner/side until the 3x3 are off the ground 1/4" 9) Remove the 1X4"'s and 3X3" blocks from the supports when you can(1/8" was easy enough) 10) Lower the Jacks down one click per corner(alternating sides....helps to have 2 people for that) until the Rhino Cart touches the ground 11) Remove the jack supports and jacks from the support structure....save some wood for moving in the event the safe tips you can quickly save yourself from picking it up off the floor, pinching a hand, etc 12) Move Safe to desired location(I will highlight that the Rhino cart made turning a breeze like when I used to ride rollerblades......a long time ago before my knees died on me!) 13) When you get to the location, use the construction jacks to raise up enough to get the rhino cart off the ground 14) Unstrap the rhino cart and pull it out.....I found that because it separates, it was easier and less risky pulling it apart into 2 pieces than jacking up the unsupported 15) In reverse now, lower the jacks one click at a time.....this is the most dangerous because the jacks could kick out, but had to not have anything underneath them so that the safe would rest on the ground. 16) Take it all the way to the ground and remove the jacks 17) Open the safe door to move the weight to the door and "walk" the safe to its final position 18) You may have to use some "umpph" on occasion.....but with a little help from my wife, I literally moved it by myself and didn't die, and #NoCussing and got it in place within 2 hours from start to finish on a Sunday afternoon.... But without the Rhino cart(and the construction jacks), I wouldn't have been able to move it more than 5 feet a day across the concrete, so once it was on there, it literally was 3 minutes of slow pushing. It's very sturdy, surprisingly light, and did not bog down with 800 lbs on it. Also, it is proudly made in America. Way to go, boys and girls! Highly recommend! Have promoted it to others and will continue to watch and recommend this brand.
M**J
How do people break these?
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.
R**W
Well built
It does not have no directional wheels. Therefor it only goes in one direction and cannot fit through a normal size door in a house in that it is too wide. It seems great for the demonstrated use of moving a large heavy object on a solid surface like converter or pavement. The load distribution on the multiple wheels seems good. I would buy it again if the wheels would caster or if the direction of the wheels could be changed on demand.
V**J
Better than a furniture dolly
Certainly capable of its weight rating. Moved 1000 lb planter boxes with ease while other 4-wheel furniture mover dollies struggled. The 8 wheels make it much easier to roll over door thresholds. Also handled a steel mesh trailer tailgate much better than other dollies. Was able to turn on a dime with easier effort than furniture dollies as well. Used a lever and wood blocks to raise the 1000 lb planter enough to slide the cart under a few inches at a time, repositioning blocks and lever with each slide under the planter until centered.
G**.
Flimsy and not as described
Horrible! Absolutely will not work for the description or weight intended. We are in the moving business and have a lot of experience with moving equipment. These are a safety hazard if you use as they describe as they are not built to handle the kind of weight they list. Flimsy and not well made!
A**B
Works as advertised.
Works perfect - moved a large safe with no issues!
K**H
Good product
Works as expected
K**R
Excellect tool and does what they say it does.
This is a very useful tool at a reasonable price. I used it to move commercial 15 washers (400 to 600 lbs.) and 13 dryers (700 to 800 lbs.) with no problem. It made the move smooth and easy. You do need two or three people if the item is tall to balance it when tipping the item over. This little tool means you strain very little to move heavy objects. I highly recommend this tool.
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1 month ago
3 weeks ago