First of all, ignore the photo of the woman on this machine. It makes the L510C unit look enormous, when in fact its probably the most compact walker Ive ever seen or owned as its only 4.5 feet long. Im 5/6 and find the handles to be at the perfect height. Two people can carry this unit around, while only one person is needed to fold the walking base upwards against the handles, for storage. Quiet as a mouse Just a mild hum. the sound of my sneakers slapping against the rubber mat comprises most of the noise . Nice, easy to read red led display panel. start and stop buttons on the panel and on the left handle grip ! Plenty of pre programmed walking modes. Also it takes your pulse when you grip the handles and displays your pulse on the panel Pretty cool! And it seems really solidly built, although the assembly instructions fail to mention you can adjust the rubber end feet (at the front) to balance the unit. Or else I could not find that part of the directions The assembly instructions are a bit frustrating. Suggest you read though them before starting at step no. 1, which will have you searching for holes to stick bolts into, yet step 2 is where you need to insert the side feet, then install those bolts from step 1. Talk about backwards . I cant think of a better machine at this price
Not as big as it looks!
First of all, ignore the photo of the woman on this machine. It makes the L510C unit look enormous, when in fact its probably the most compact walker Ive ever seen or owned as its only 4.5 feet long. Im 5/6 and find the handles to be at the perfect height. Two people can carry this unit around, while only one person is needed to fold the walking base upwards against the handles, for storage. Quiet as a mouse Just a mild hum. the sound of my sneakers slapping against the rubber mat comprises most of the noise . Nice, easy to read red led display panel. start and stop buttons on the panel and on the left handle grip ! Plenty of pre programmed walking modes. Also it takes your pulse when you grip the handles and displays your pulse on the panel Pretty cool! And it seems really solidly built, although the assembly instructions fail to mention you can adjust the rubber end feet (at the front) to balance the unit. Or else I could not find that part of the directions The assembly instructions are a bit frustrating. Suggest you read though them before starting at step no. 1, which will have you searching for holes to stick bolts into, yet step 2 is where you need to insert the side feet, then install those bolts from step 1. Talk about backwards . I cant think of a better machine at this price