🌞 Dry Smart, Live Green!
The Minky Homecare Outdoor Retractable Dual Clothesline offers a heavy-duty, energy-efficient solution for drying clothes outdoors. With a retractable design that saves space and a durable PVC coated line, this product is perfect for all seasons and comes with easy installation hardware.
Line Weight | Heavy |
Style Name | Heavy Duty |
Color | Gray |
Material Type | Polyvinyl Chloride |
A**N
Great Clothesline!
I think it’s a great little clothesline at a great price. Works perfectly for my family of 4. Easy to “install” and is sturdy enough for what I need. I was looking for a clothesline that is discreet when not in use and this definitely fits the bill. Keeps the backyard neat and tidy when not in use. I figure I could also bring it inside during the winter months for use here and there as needed.Some reviews mentioned issues with the line sagging or the retraction failing. So far, zero issues here. I’ve been diligent with retracting the line slowly at the end of every use. I think with reasonable use, this product will last a long while. And if it doesn’t, the price is low enough that I couldn’t be too mad. Would definitely recommend!
L**W
FANTASTIC!!
I installed a Minky retractable laundry line at my house in 1998, and brought it with me when I moved to my current house 12 years ago. IT STILL WORKS! I replaced it only because the laundry line has started to crack -- mind you, after 25 years outdoors in the brutal Texas summer heat. Super-easy to replace because all I had to do was pull the cotter pin out of the anchor and switch new for old. Exact same design.I noticed there was a really wide range of prices on these gadgets, with some being twice the price for just a few feet of line. (A mere 84 inches? Please, that's for hanging things in the shower, not a real laundry line. Pay attention to what you're getting!) So just for fun, I bought a second retractable line for a lower price from a Chinese brand to see what the difference was. The second one works fine, but the line itself is visibly thinner and presumably less sturdy than the Minky's. Fine for delicates, but for hanging anything heavy, I'd choose the Minky.Fantastic product. Not much lasts 25 years, but this one did.
A**D
Good and Useful Product . . . Would Be Really Good with One Improvement
As others have said in reviews here, those nubs on the bottom---the ones that are for wrapping the cords around a couple of times to keep them in place rather than to retract when the lines are in use---are on seams and do not appear to be all that sturdy.Rather than to experience what others have gone through with fracturing and splitting nubs, I cut to the chase and purchased a couple of three-inch hard-fiber cleats to use for cord-wrapping, mounting them outboard of the clothesline housing maybe 1.5 inches or so. They work very well and should outlast the unit and its cords. I of course will not use the nubs at all. The manufacturer should reinforce those nubs, which are scandalously flimsy. I'd give this five stars then rather then four.My need is in the laundry area for hanging smaller items that are not going into the electric dryer nor worth putting up the Brabantia Lift-o-Matic umbrella clothes dryer outside for---purchased, incidentally, from Amazon a couple of years ago and the best such device I've ever seen or used---so it's spanning only about 12 feet, which is just fine.But one thing briefly puzzled me, and that was how to get the lines relatively taut and non-saggy. It can be done, but if it's not organized but instead done by eyeballing the lines each time, the lines will either be too saggy or too taut to finish attaching to the cleats. But then I figured out how to do it just right every time. Here is the process for both lines:1. Pull out the lines and attach them to the hooks you have installed at the end of their run.2. Get a yardstick---easier to use for this purpose than a retractable steel tape rule---and hold the end against the orifice where one of the lines emerges from the device housing.3. With thumb and forefinger of the other hand, grasp the line right at the orifice where the end of the yardstick is. Pull the line out to 19 inches---this is a good place to start, because that is the distance at which I finally arrived after much experimentation---and hold the line against the yardstick at the 19-inch mark with your thumb and forefinger, keeping the yardstick firmly snug to the line orifice as you do so.4. With the hand that was holding the yardstick, let go of it and grasp the line right at the orifice. Now you have one hand holding the line against the yardstick at the 19-inch mark and the other hand holding the line against the edge of the orifice.5. Keeping the line taut between the 19-inch hand and the orifice hand, let go of the yardstick (now being held by the 19-inch hand) and let if fall.6. Holding the line in place at the edge of the orifice, and keeping it taut with the other hand, bring the line around against the side of the housing and catch it against the bottom of the cleat.7. Wrap the line entirely around the cleat, bottom to top and then top back down to bottom, and then bring the line back to the top again, which gives you one-and-a-half wraps. Hook the line at the top of the cleat as if to wrap it again, but don't.8. If 19 inches is correct for your setup, the line will be slightly saggy but about as taut as you can get it without putting too much tension on it. If it is too taut to catch at the top of the cleat, start over trying 20 inches the next time; if it is a little too saggy, try again with 18 inches.9. Whatever the correct length of the pull-out portion turns out to be, when you have the line hanging and secured the way you want it, take a magic marker and dot the line right where it bends back against the edge of the orifice. Then unwrap the line from the cleat, which will cause it to retract, and pull the line back out until you see the black dot. Take the magic marker and put a black ring around the line at the dot location so you can find it easily whenever you want to extend the lines for use. The black mark always goes right at the orifice edge.There may be another way to do this, but I could not figure it out. It's a minor hassle, but once the correct amount of slack line is determined to be correct for securing the lines at the cleats, and the lines are marked with the magic marker, it will be no problem to extend and secure the lines ever afterwards.
C**A
Coolest clothesline ever!
The facts: It is huge and you can't just screw it down in any old place. It has two lines, so it is more versatile than most others. It has two slide-out bolts so you can take it off its mount in winter and put it back in warmer weather without removing any screws. Mine is in the garage waiting for better days. For use I hook the two lines on the fence, not parallel to each other, so they can be longer. I love the self-retracting feature, too. One little thing: I added cleats to the house under where the line is attached to keep it tight when in use. I thought it wasn't getting a good enough grip on the little feet. It seemed to slip a bit.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
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