🛠️ Elevate Your Restroom Game with Style!
The Sofpull Centerpull Side-by-Side Toilet Paper Dispenser by GP PRO offers a sleek, modern design with high-capacity rolls and one-at-a-time dispensing to reduce waste and maintenance. Its durable construction and key lock security ensure longevity and protection against vandalism, while the enclosed rolls promote hygiene by minimizing cross-contamination.
S**G
Great commercial tissue holders
These do tend to wear out over time (2-3years in commercial setting)The metal lock to plastic will be the first to go followed by cracking clear plastic.All easily replaced however with minimal labor.Best value though!
P**R
reasonable quality tissue & works well (pending quality control rolls), reduces waste most cases
Pros:(1) The 2 Ply paper is of reasonably good quality, better than most commercial (nearly as cheap as dirt) tissue selected by many business focused only on up-front costs,such as the ever larger single-ply rolls which used to be in our building & resulted in lots of waste (users pulling off large quantities because of thin, poorly quality & fragile tissue & wasting a lot was easy) and one could hear, at times, all the noise from people pulling lots of the low quality single-ply paper off the larger rolls.(2) The rolls last a long time if prepared carefully and installed properly.(3) Carefully comparing costs, the GP tissue, purchased in multiple 6 packs, is about the same delivered cost as the paper which used to be in the building but was of far lower quality with lots of waste.(3) Yes, the paper comes out crinkled & is best flattened into a couple (now 4-ply) sheets overlapped, but this is precisely one of the ways by which it decreases waste yet remains easy to use.The squares are large enough to be folded over and re-used 3-5 time while still being quite neat.Cons:(1) Quality control of some of the paper rolls is clearly inconsistent.Since the paper is 2-ply, it is critical that the 2-plies remain together as they are pulled out and unwind from the center, not the outside, of the roll.Some rolls work well, others tend to jam multiple times before out; Why?I noticed that the rolls, which work well, have a thin line (less than 1/8" wide) down the length of the paper.This like appears to be an swagging of the two-ply layers together so that they do not seperate, but pull out together.They rolls which jam do not have such a line so the two-ply layers frequently split leading to too many layers unwinding at the same time and jamming the dispenser opening.While I am sure, given the low costs, that the process is heavily automated, there is clearly a people problem at the factory; a lack of quality control by the people and managing people involved not caring resulting in product sabotage.(2) The GP video of how to load new rolls of tissue into the dispenser clearly shows/implies that pulling the cardboard tube out of the center is the roll is tissue is easy.This is rarely the case!(a) The spiral weak location within the cardboard tube is not that weak, rarely splits beyond 1/3 way through the length of the cardboard tube, from either side, on the 1st try.(b) The location at which the tissue is glued to the outside of the cardboard tube does not show on the inside of the cardboard tube.(c) Without knowing the location of the glue, one does not know from what tissue the cardboard will slide out vs. what section of the cardboard tube with begin pulling out tissue in mass (resulting lots of waste)Additionally, the glue used to attach the tissue to the cardboard tube has, at times, not been allowed to dry FIRST. Thus the glue has soaked through multiple layers and multiple layers (not just the beginning of the tissue on the roll) are glued together.Personally , I created a make "fix" for Con (a) above; one NOT offered by GP.I created a knife tool using two pieces of 1/8" 2" x 18" long aluminum flat stock, screwed together with four drilled & tapped holes for thumb screws, one on each end, two near the middle.The two near the middle are angled and serve as both a holder and a back-up for an thin and very sharp utility knife snap-off blades (e.g. 30 Degree Carbon Steel Snap-Off Spare Blades). positioned so that the blade sharp edge protruded from the middle of the flat-stock blade holder.I use this holder, with the blade tip protruding just enough to fully cut through the center cardboard tube along 6 lines spaced around the circumference of the cardboard and extending from end to end.With the cardboard tube cut in this way, it becomes fairly easy to separate the first piece (using and envelope opener), then the remaining 5 pieces of the central cardboard tube from out of the roll of tissue.(Couldn't the GP people have offered such a tool? Of course!)My knife holder solves con (2.a) quite well.However, con (1), (2.b) and (2.c) remain!
J**E
Good product.
Hard to pull out after a while. Get stuck. Have to open too often to correct, so have to leavetraditional roll out, which I was trying to eliminate.
Trustpilot
1 week ago
2 months ago