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| Equipment Wheelchairs, stimulators, and other devices |
| View Poll Results: Did your first chair suck? | |||
| Yes, wrong measurements |
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74 | 35.75% |
| Yes, wrong style |
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29 | 14.01% |
| Yes, it was a dinosaur |
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62 | 29.95% |
| No, it was perfect |
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42 | 20.29% |
| Voters: 207. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#91 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2012
Posts: 210
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My first chair was borrowed from an CPA who was working with my grandmother (she was an incomplete para from an AVM) Anyways, I was barely 14, with an Invacare Standard...standardly craptastic down to the *blue VINYL sling* and steel rebar frame. I swear it was made of rebar... Second chair was an Invacare Patriot (heavy much?!) rental...but alas it was returned....still better than what I currently use! There's a Breezy from Quickie's standard line, from Craigslist while on vacation...fits about as well as you'd guess. And then there's my K3 which was made in China, practically a transport chair that happens to have pushrims on the 24 in molded plastic wheels... I've got an Ebay ZRA Ti on the way....hoping it will give me a better ride. (Well, what couldn't? There's not much competition in the way of the chairs I'm using now!)
Note: I'm a part-time user due to a fluctuating neurological disorder. |
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#92 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: WA
Posts: 101
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My first chair was an Everest & Jennings chair that my parents got at a local thrift store. It was the type that the armrests didn't come off and the footrests were not adjustable. Because the armrests were not adjustable or anything, it was very hard to push the chair on my own, because my arms were at an uncomfortable position. After using that chair for over 3 years, my insurance covered a Quickie wheelchair, which I loved. We eventually donated the E&J chair back to the same thrift store we bought it from.
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#93 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: New York City
Posts: 343
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My first chair was awesome. It was a tiny Quickie with a Damoco motor and battery under the seat, so it could be disassembled and put in the back of a station wagon. Perfect for my needs at the time.
My second chair, however, was just awful. We went through the same guy because he had done such a great job on the first chair, but he really dropped the ball on the second one. Nothing fit right, the cushion was just plain foam and completely inadequate, and it was controlled with a single switch plus scanner so it was impossible to steer straight. I'd be in searing pain within two hours whenever I sat in it, so it really limited my ability to go out. And he refused to make any revisions or even add any kind of chest strap or truck support, and of course no other vendor would touch it. The model it was built on (Invacare Action Arrow, with the belt drive) was even recalled for being a fire hazard, and the motor died, but still no one would touch it! It was a nightmare, but I finally managed to get my current one a few years ago. |
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#94 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 312
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Looking back after getting my second one, yea.
It was heavy, cheap feeling and too big. gpv quickie |
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#95 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: San Diego, CA, USA
Posts: 307
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My first chair was an E&J. Probably 60 ~ 70 pounds. Did it suck? I was better than anything else going, but I became a very early (3 digit serial number) Quickie 1 purchaser. Which with all new parts and a custom build wooden seat, I am sitting in as I type.
__________________
T4 complete, 150 ft fall, 1966. Completely fused hips, partially fused knees and spine, heterotopic ossification. Unsuccessful DREZ surgery about 1990. Successful bladder augmentation using small intestine about 1992. Normal SCI IC UTI problems culminating in a hospital stay in 2001. No antibiotics or doctor visits for UTI since 2001: d-mannose. Your mileage may vary. |
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#96 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Seattle, WA
Posts: 481
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I had a Quickie TNT - which seemed like a good idea (TNT = takes no tools), but failed in execution.
The "easily adjustable" wheel locks would randomly vibrate off my chair. Sometimes this would be when I was crossing busy streets & I didn't notice that they'd failed - so I replaced them probably 6 times and I only used the chair for 2-3 years. The levers on the caster housing would flip open, and if not noticed would get snapped off. The whole thing was quite heavy - I'm glad I wasn't loading into a car at the time! |
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#97 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2010
Posts: 780
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Oddly, no. It was a Quadra. It was a rigid chair that was left over from the VA games. Bent spokes, all scratched up, back about a foot tall, no brakes, no arm rests. I straightened the spokes, cleaned it up and got in. Holly crap, it taught me balance in about 2 seconds. I had only been in hospital chairs. I figured out how to transfer with fixed front end, no brakes. Got more rehab from that chair than all the PT.
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