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Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 3 de febrero de 2025
These a fairly big and light weight, they should work great in deep snow.
Frank
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 14 de enero de 2025
They work quite well in the sand on the beach but bend easier than I'd hoped on harder ground. Still, much better than the flimsy plastic or thin medal rod type
Gu Koga
Comentado en México el 21 de noviembre de 2024
Hace tiempo, dos o tres años dejé de utilizar mi rifle de diabolos porq noté que no daba en el blanco y salían sin fuerza, probé varias marcas y ninguna servía, entonces pensé que a lo mejor era la calidad de los diabolos y pedí mi marca Mendoza y NO ME EQUIVOQUÉ, solucionado mi problema
SecurityDetail
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 12 de noviembre de 2023
These were PERFECT for holding taut lines for a tarp over a pet crate in my SW Florida yard, where the soil has the consistency of pure sand. (See my photo of a camo tarp over a pet crate for feeding feral cats outside in wet weather.) I first tried some long but narrow aluminum stakes, and even the lawn root system did not prevent them from pulling out through the ground lengthwise. These are nice and wide and PLENTY STRONG. I mostly pushed them in by hand, and used my foot to push them a couple final inches. Someone complained about them being weak and bending. I disagree; they're not "weak". Sure, you could bend them by hammering with a hard hammer if they hit a rock or hard root, but these stakes aren't designed for those conditions. I'd wondered whether a loop of cord would stay in place around the collar at the top of the stake ... or whether I should pass my cord through one of the holes. But, by angling them correctly (buried toe toward tent, collared head away from tent) and ensuring the concave surface faces the tent, the curved collar was fully sufficient to hold the loop of jute that I used to tie the corners of my tent.
ClienteDeMéxico🇲🇽
Comentado en México el 5 de abril de 2022
Se rayan fácilmente y en menos de un mes le subieron casi el doble de precio de aproximadamente $350.00 MXN a más de $650.00 MXN no deberían de permitir jugar con los precios de esa manera.
Cath
Comentado en Australia el 31 de enero de 2020
Very wide pegs
Victor Cruz Medina
Comentado en México el 26 de diciembre de 2018
Llega en tiempo y tiene buen precio
Customer
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 1 de junio de 2015
Got these to complement some 10" Harbor Freight stakes. The HF stakes are for firm ground. These Cosmos work great in sand.I used them three ways in sand, and they held up find to sustained 20mph winds and gusts over 30mph. In fact, they did this even though I (unwisely) pitched the rather large REI Kingdom 6 tent crossways to the wind, rather than aerodynamically into the wind. I had to TRY to get the view :)The first way I used them was traditional: peg angled down into the sand; tent guy looped over the lip on the stake. This was fine for corners where the wet sand was close to the surface, and I could get the stake perpendicular to the guy line.The second way I used them was less traditional. I fed a bottom loop on the guy line through the small hole near the bottom of the stake, then pulled the loop over the stake. This is a bit hard on the line, but I'd rather replace line than have an anchor pull out. With the line in the small hole I'd cut a thin line in the sand along the expected path of the guy line, then shove the stake into the sand as far as I could, so the guy line was buried. This held up fine even with sand that was dry quite far down.The third way I used them was also traditional. On my large tent (rated for 6 people) there are intermediate tiedowns between the major anchor points near on the tent poles. These are very important to keep these parts of the fly from dripping condensation (or rain) on the tent body. For these I dug trenches about 6" deep and buried the stakes, with line looped as for the second stake. This took short bits of line, with the two loose ends coming up high enough to tie on the tabs on the fly.End result: tent stayed snugly guyed down with almost no day-to-day readjustment of the tie points.I wonder how my tent would do in snow? It would almost be worth it to try, just to see if the stakes work as well in snow as sand!BTW: I think having these be 12x1.38" instead of 9x1" (which is typical of other similar LOOKING stakes) makes a BIG difference! Having over 16 square inches in the sand is much better than just having 9!
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