PinchNot Home Door Shield Guard pour portes à 90 degrés – Protège-doigts et protecteur pour protéger votre porte contre les enfants. de Carlsbad Safety Products

Brand:Pinch-Not

3.2/5

55.98

Le PinchNot Home Shield est un dispositif de sécurité pour enfants/bébés/portes, alias un protège-porte ou un bouclier de porte, qui empêche les blessures aux doigts du côté charnière de la porte. Les protections de porte sont désignées par plusieurs synonymes, y compris les protège-doigts de porte, les protège-doigts de porte, les protège-doigts pour les portes, les protège-doigts, les protège-charnières de porte, les protège-doigts, les protecteurs de charnière de porte, les protège-doigts de porte ou les protège-doigts de porte. Parfois, ces noms sont précédés du mot enfant - par exemple, protège-doigts pour enfant, protège-porte pour enfant, protège-doigts pour porte pour enfant, protège-doigts pour porte pour enfant ou simplement protège-doigts pour porte pour enfant. Quel que soit son nom, l'objectif d'un protège-doigts pour porte est toujours le même : assurer la sécurité de la porte des enfants. Un protège-doigts (également appelé protège-doigts de porte) doit être installé partout où les tout-petits ou les jeunes enfants rencontrent des portes à charnières. Un protège-doigts de porte convertit une porte dangereuse en porte de sécurité. Le Home Shield mesure 68 pouces de long et s'adapte à l'avant d'une porte résidentielle standard (1-3/8 pouce) qui s'ouvre à 90 degrés. Le Home Shield n'empêche pas le fonctionnement normal de la porte. Il est rapide et facile à installer, sans outils ni vis nécessaires. Les bandes adhésives étirables facilitent le retrait, si et quand le retrait est souhaité. La conception pliante brevetée permet un emballage compact et des coûts d'expédition réduits. Ce modèle à petit prix est parfait pour la maison ! (Pour les applications commerciales, le modèle PinchNot Pro est recommandé.) Ce produit est le leader sur le marché des protège-doigts. Protégez les doigts sur les montants de porte en utilisant nos protections de cadre de porte et ne vous souciez plus de la sécurité des portes des enfants ou de la sécurité des enfants. Autres termes descriptifs : sécurité de porte pour enfants, sécurité de porte pour bébé, sécurité de porte pour bébé, sécurité de porte pour enfant, dispositifs de sécurité de porte, sécurité de porte pour tout-petits, sécurité de porte pour bébé, garde de sécurité de porte, sécurité pour enfants, sécurité de porte pour tout-petit, enfant sécurité, porte à l'épreuve des bébés, porte à l'épreuve des enfants.

EAN: 0851405003222

Catégories Sécurité, Protection des bords et des coins,

La conception pliante brevetée permet un emballage compact et des coûts d'expédition réduits. Les bandes adhésives extensibles facilitent le retrait du protège-charnière lorsque vous le souhaitez. Installation facile et rapide, sans outils ni vis nécessaires. Permet le fonctionnement normal de la porte une fois le protecteur de porte fixé. Fournit une protection complète des doigts à l'avant du côté charnière de la porte.
Batteries required ‎No
Country/Region of origin ‎USA
Customer Reviews 4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 184 ratings 4.2 out of 5 stars
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‎No
Item model number ‎CSP23
Item Weight ‎7.2 ounces
material_composition ‎Polyvinyl Chloride
Number Of Items ‎1
Product Dimensions ‎18 x 8 x 14 inches

3.2

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5 Star
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3 Star
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Scritto da: Arkansas Farmer
A detailed review by a parent who bought these after a 2 year old had a partially amputed finger from the hinge side of a door..
This is a longer review; actually, it’s the review I wish would have been here when we were shopping! I’ll start with our summary, then background (why we were looking for door protectors), and then detailed review that explains the summary ratings. I also plan to update in a few months. ******************************** I'M UPDATING REVIEW NOW that it has been 3+ months. I'll add a few notes throughout the review with a summary here: - The covers that installed well have been adhering just great (details below) - Carlsbad Safety updated their instructions to mention the 1/4" offset/gap - With some doors we installed 2x 17" sections, and others we installed 3x 17" sections. Now that time has gone by and we're watching our little ones around the doors (1.5, 2.5, and 4 years old) we're feeling like 3x sections are overkill. Since each cover is 4x 17" sections, and each pack includes 2 covers, if you only install 2x sections per door that would mean each pack can be used to cover 4x doors rather than two. This increases the value. - I'm increasing my rating from 4 stars to 5 stars. Primarily because the adhesive is holding well at 3+ months and because we were able to protect 4x doors per set (bullet immediately above) the value for this is better than if the full height is used on a single door in which case you only protect 2 doors per set. ******************************** ANOTHER UPDATE as it has now been a year since I installed the shields. All of the shields are adhering properly and none have come off. The one that we initially had problems with (due to having to uninstall and reinstall) - has been staying put. We love the peace of mind that comes from having these on our doors. ******************************** If I missed something in the review, feel free to ask a question and I can update/add to the review. THE SUMMARY REVIEW: Functionality: 5 stars! (WE LOVE THE PEACE OF MIND WITH THESE IN PLACE) Instructions: 2.5 stars (UPDATED to 3.5 stars due to improved instructions mentioning the 1/4" installation gap) Value: 3.5 stars (UPDATED to 4.5 stars since we're only using 2x sections per door which means each cover can protect 2 doors and each 2-pack can cover 4 doors) Adhesion: 5 stars Reapply Adhesion: 2.5 stars (UPDATED to 3.5 stars due to the reapplied protector still staying attached). Our background: We have heavy (solid core) wooden doors in our house. On top of that the door to the garage expands/contracts at certain times of the year and can be difficult to close – requiring more effort/force. I can still remember the moment my 2-year-old little girl put her finger into the hinge side of that door as I was closing it. She didn’t pull her finger back (good thing or we would have been dealing with a full amputation) or scream but made a little exclamation and looked up at me with huge eyes full of pain. We instantly got her pinkie finger out of the door -- it was dripping blood on the floor -- and I knew we had a major problem. We quickly wrapped her finger in a clean cloth and applied pressure. A minute or two later I needed to check and see what we were dealing with. As I gently removed the cloth the entire end of her finger shifted: I felt absolutely sick to my stomach. What followed was a $3,000 (crazy but true; and that, my friends, is the discounted/negotiated price) visit to the emergency room for stitches. The official diagnosis was “attempted restoration of partial amputation.” Then daily bandage changes (not fun). The ER said to come back at the 6-day mark for stitch removal – which turned out to be too early and was a very painful/traumatic visit (not sure if it was harder for my little girl or me). Then a consultation with a children’s plastic surgeon because the stitches were removed too early and the finger hadn’t fully healed (he said for little children he would have had stitches in for 10 days, assuming daily bandage changes and no signs of infection). We are so very grateful to God that, at about 3 weeks, her finger/fingertip had fully healed. Our home’s doors (solid oak): My wife and I had been talking about our doors ever since we began having children. With how heavy the doors are we figured we were going to have safety problems. We worked very hard with our children to keep fingers away from doors and to have them never open/close doors- hard (if not impossible) with a 3 year old, 2 year old, and baby. While we figured we would eventually have a door emergency, we were always focused on the door-handle side. We sure didn’t expect it to be ME the one closing a door, and that the emergency would be on the HINGE side. Researching changing to hollow-core doors. Following that injury we began researching doors. We were going to remove our children’s closet doors (replace those with shower curtains) and also replace all of our interior solid core doors with hollow-core doors. Solid-core doors tend to weigh about 70 pounds. Hollow-core doors weigh about 24 pounds each. To help with the hinge side I was going to route the hinge side edges so the wood was rounded and didn’t have a sharp edge. The doors were going to cost about $40 each and probably take an hour or two to install. Our doors are beautiful 6-panel solid oak doors, and the replacements were either going to be plain white 6-panel, or we could get ugly unfinished wood “flats”. We eventually found a home improvement store that had 6-panel hollow-core doors in unfinished oak for $80 each – however, they would have taken even longer to install since the door handle wasn’t pre-drilled, but they would have more closely matched our trim (or we could have spent many hours staining/lacquering them to match). So, we were looking at spending between $1,000 and $2,000, plus MANY hours of time, to put doors in our house that wouldn’t have matched our trim, and if/when we sell the house we would have had to put the solid-core doors back up. The crazy thing is that this big door project wouldn’t have protected my little girl’s finger as the door between the house and garage is required by code to be a solid-core door. I also talked with a door salesman at one of the large home improvement stores who said he was happy to sell us doors but he didn’t think we would be happy with the hollow-core doors. While safer, he said he feels the force necessary to close a hollow-core door ends up being somewhat similar to solid-core, and that “children are children” and injuries can and do occur with hollow-core as well. Door Covers: Which leads us to this product. We had been running Google searches and the only door covers we were finding seemed to cost closer to $100 (per side). Plus, that still left the handle side unprotected. I’m not sure why we didn’t find these sooner, but when we did, we were intrigued. We didn’t care what they looked like (remember: we were looking at switching from beautiful oak solid-core doors to plain white hollow core 6-panel doors): our biggest question was simply how long the adhesive would last (and if it didn’t last I was thinking I could tack these to the door). Spending about $40 per door for something that might last a year at best was not the solution we were looking for. However, the idea of spending no more than $40 per door, a few minutes for installation, and being “done” with it was something we wanted. We bought several to see how they worked and if they would last for years. DETAILED REVIEW: These door protectors are basically white foamboard that has been scored so that they will fold up into the door when closed. They are folded into four sections of 17 inches each, with a total height of about 68-70 inches. Little 1-inch strips of specialty double-stick adhesive has been applied (several per foot) to adhere to the door or door frame. Most of the 17-inch panels have 4 adhesives (1 at top and 1 at bottom on each side) although a few of our panels only came with two adhesives (1 in the middle on each side) – which is a problem for install
Scritto da: ruerue
Amazing quality
Looks good. Working fine. Easy to install
Scritto da: Stephanie Lee
Looks nice, but be careful if you have painted door frame
Works well and is not noticeable, however, it ripped off the paint on one of the door frames we put it on so be advised.
Scritto da: Ben C.
Great, except for the price
While I understand that a company can set whatever price they want for their goods, and that just because something costs a couple bucks to make doesn't mean it shouldn't reasonably cost a couple dozen bucks to buy -- because of R&D, marketing, opportunity, scarcity, etc. But in this case, I think this company is making a serious mistake. Obviously I don't know their projections/forecasts/sales models, so I'm probably wrong, but here's my take. This surely doesn't cost more than a few bucks landed. It's glorified scored plastic coated poster board. And it works well, though I'm not sure how it will hold up after years of use -- and it can't be ignored that it is ugly. Still, my only issue with it right now is price. I'm paying $25 to protect one side of a two sided door. So to protect my child's fingers from both sides it would cost $50 per door. And to protect my child I would want to safety proof all the doors he's likely to interact with, which would be at a minimum my bedroom door, its bathroom and closet doors, his bedroom door, a common bathroom door, his playroom/family room door, and my office door. And that's not even considering down stairs. So that's 7 doors at least. If I were to protect him from just the interior downstairs doors, it'd be another 4. So using this product would cost me $350 - 550. I don't see anyone, or at least very, very few people, spending that much, it's insane, and spending that much would make you feel like an absolute sucker, when it's screamingly obvious how cheap it was for them to make. I cannot believe that they would not make more money providing a fairer deal to their customers, I think a lot of people, like myself, would be able to convince themselves to spend $150 or even $200 to protect their entire house. But not $550. And so I bought a couple as an experiment, and that's it. I would have gladly given them a lot more money, if it solved my whole house problem. It's a real pity. I wish them the best, I just wish they would reevaluate their business model. If their goal is to protect children's fingers and make money, I think they'd do both better getting more of their product out in more volume to more people.
Scritto da: K. Moynehan
Good but with a caveat
Pretty easy to install and as other reviewers mentioned, easy to cut in half to make two sections still long enough to cover pinch-prone areas. Installed them a few months ago and despite my doubts about the adhesive tape staying put on a moving door, so far so good. Only caveat is that on my boys' bedroom with a level door (that previously would stay put wherever you left it), this device forces it slowly closed. For me this means that this room gets hotter than it used to since it's no longer getting hallway air circulation, and I've had to use a door stopper. Two young boys means the stopper is never where I need it, so the room is usually hot. In hindsight I would not have bothered buying or installing this, but that's because my kids weren't prone to jam their fingers into tight pinch hazards anyway. With a crawling baby I probably would.
Scritto da: Dora M.
Cat paw guard
Perfect guard so I won't break my cats' legs when shutting the super heavy front door while they're trying to reach out through the gap.
Scritto da: M&E Adams
Good Purchase
Good purchase. I bought two and cut them in half to install on four doors -- the main doors used by my 3 year old. They each installed in about 2 minutes. I'm always worried about the 3 year old shutting the door on the 1 year old's fingers. But I'm not worried anymore for those four doors. Looking at the quality, I can see these lasting over a year. They adhere with about 10 short pieces of thick tape to the door frame and the door. I haven't removed any from the doors, but I think I could easily pull them off and expect no damage to the doors. If the tape looses grip, I could probably just buy replacement tape locally.
Scritto da: milica
Great
Just installed the guard and even thoug it esplicity said residential doors I was able to manage it to fit over the gap on a comercial enterance... Love the simplicity of the product and easy instalation process , however adhesives is the reason for my 4 star review. I wish the stripes were longer and stronger ! I will have to order some more double sided tape in order for the guard to hold the position!

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