ilyazhito Posted November 2 Share Posted November 2 There are plenty of options for wheeled bags out there, from the CCM bags with 3 wheels, a back board, and flexible cloth openings, to the Bauer bag with a telescoping handle, to the Vaughn bag, with some more rigidity, to the Grit Sumo bag, a tower bag, where the pads strap to the front. Has anyone seen (or made) a goalie bag with trolley dolly wheels? A trolley dolly looks like this. It has an L-shaped bar to lift the bag over stairs, and either 3 wheels on each side, or large wheels that allow it to climb stairs. It seems that a goalie bag could support big wheels (or extra wheels) and the L-shaped bracket, because it would not add that much weight to the bag compared to the gear inside the bag. Is there a reason why no goalie bags in a trolley dolly style exist? Would it be possible to mod an existing goalie bag to fit a trolley dolly style set of wheels and bracket? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Korppi32 Posted November 2 Share Posted November 2 (edited) Goalie bags are huge and heavy (and expensive). If you put bigger wheels on bag you will need a truck to move it. Pick up cars are not the thing in Europe. Even with current models you need a big station wagon. Edited November 2 by Korppi32 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Scythe Posted November 3 Share Posted November 3 20th century goalie bag 2 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MTH Posted November 4 Share Posted November 4 I used to play with a guy that used a hand truck and would strap his bag and pads to it. Kinda over the top - but it was what he liked. He said that using the three items allowed him the ability to fit it all in his car. The bag and pads in his backseat and the hand truck would fold up and go in the trunk/boot of the car. Going that way you at least can use the hand truck for more than just your gear. So you maximize the investment for that. Non goalie bag is a fraction of a goalie bag. You can and should carry your pads on their own (drying out after use). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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