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Reviews (5)

Dec 23, 2015
It's a Rough Project
Ok guys, so here's the deal. The letters are cool, but they suck. Basically, they're a rough project - the upper right corner of each letter is rough from the cut, and the letters are each cut so that there's slag (or burring, or dross) which scratches paint and keeps the adhesive from sticking enough to hold the letters on. As of now, I've had to file the slag/burrs off 4 of them and replace the adhesive with 3M tape. Not a big deal, but a time waster. I'll probably do the other 5 just so they don't fall off on the road. And yes, I did the prep, and heated the tailgate before install, and finger formed the letters to conform to the curve of the tailgate. The problem is that the cut isn't clean, and the slag forms a ridge around the adhesive - there's no way for the product to work the way it should. There are also bits of the slag stuck into the adhesive tape in places, which decreases the ability of the letters to stick properly. One letter in particular arrived with 2 scratches, both of which caught fingernails. The adhesive is applied to the shiny/polished side - so I'm not sure where the "chrome" went off to - but don't expect the letters to be shiny chrome like a chrome bumper. Magnets stick strongly to the letters.
So my general inclination is to ding the product. They basically have something, but it's REALLY rough and they shouldn't be selling it as a "ready to apply" product. Description and pictures didn't bring the problems to light. I think they know the problems, but they're still trying to unload this poor product. Expect to lose letters on the road unless you take the time and expense to file each letter smooth and replace the adhesive tape.
Other than that, they're cut accurately and fit the tailgate indentations well.

Jan 07, 2020
It's ok, not great.
It's probably way more "mouse" than I need. I was having a tendonitis flareup. "Get this mouse," I was told. Ok. 3 buttons. I deactivated one because I was constantly clicking it. "You'll get past that," I was told. Hmmm, well, 2 weeks and not yet (I can hear it when I click it accidentally). Like any mouse, you can set pointer speed through Windows, so having it on board is redundant. Set and forget.
Left button, right button, wheel - they work. Nothing special there, other than at first it seems like if you scroll slowly, the page moves slowly. I can probably describe that better - because it's REALLY annoying for the page to not move consistently with the scroll wheel. If I want 3 lines per wheel click, then I want 3 lines whether I move the wheel 1 click forward or backward. This is more like 1 line per forward click, and 1 line per TWO backward clicks - and that's REALLY annoying.
And the wheel only clicks audibly in one direction - it's silent in the other (you can feel the notch, but there's no "click"). Push the wheel 1 click away and you get 2 silent lines. Pull it back one click and you get 1 audible click with no movement - until you pull it back a 2nd click, and then you get 1 line movement with an audible click. So when you push, it moves with every click, but when you pull it moves with every OTHER click. What the ...? I'm not sure that I understand how that is a better system than a standard mouse - or why it's built into this one at all. It's as if someone said "Hey, let's make it do THIS!" Makes no sense to me. No wonder it seems to scroll ok when I push the wheel to scroll up, but goes real slow when I pull the wheel to scroll down - because that's exactly how it works - 1 click per line to scroll up, TWO clicks per line to scroll down. Nobody mentioned that in the literature.
Forward, back thumb button? I suppose someone is desperate for that feature, but it's not necessary for me. Software to set up a mouse? Ok, again, I don't see the point. Maybe the software is great, but for me it was completely unnecessary - I plugged in the dongle and the mouse worked out of the box. Point for Evoluent.
Maybe the software is so the user can defeat the crazy default settings and get the mouse to work like a normal mouse has worked for what, 30 years? Texture, feel, weight, all pretty much standard, but I've been using a mouse daily for 3 decades anyway (wireless since 2005) and so there's really no need for something new or different, other than hand position - and I guess that's the big selling point.
I used the mouse for a few days (I want to say 3, might have been 4), and the tendonitis I think got worse - went from occasional/positional to constant ache. Got bad enough I picked up a wrist brace and VIOLA! Next day, no more pain. The Evoluent Mouse is a take-it-or-leave-it thing. It's not "bad," but it's not a panacea, either. Pretty expensive for what it is and does. It's ok, but I wouldn't recommend it.
Try an inexpensive vertical mouse 1st and see if you like it enough to spend more money on an Evoluent so you can try to figure out if the software can correct the crazy default behavior. I believe you can download the software from Evoluent. I don't have that kind of time.

Feb 13, 2018
Funky Lid Design Makes This "Just Average"
This is a combo product, the storage bin and sliding lid. Because it's a combo, it's harder than normal to rate. One part is good, the other isn't. The bin is fine, it's 12" wide, 18" long and 9" deep, as described. Clear polycarbonate, rigid, holds up to heat, probably will take some abuse without breaking. I haven't abused it yet. The sliding lid is made from the same material, fits properly, and snaps into place. It's not an airtight seal. It locks well enough that it'd probably keep mice out so long as they didn't figure out how to work the sliding part of the lid. And that, the sliding part of the lid, has a design problem that makes this product less than it could be. When the lid is mounted on the bin, it functions ok. It's a sliding lid, so one half of the container can be opened to access the contents without needing to remove the lid. When the lid is on, the bin supports the slider and helps hold it in place. It works ok. But when the lid is removed, there's no means for the slider to be held in place. It flops down and then falls out. It's a PITA to hold on to the slider while moving the lid. This means that EVERY TIME the lid is removed, it turns into a two piece object, and special attention needs to be paid to make sure the sliding part doesn't fall out and crash to the floor. The same issue exists when putting the lid back on the bin - the slider has to be held in place so the lid can be fitted. It's more trouble than it's worth. Cool idea, poorly executed. Wouldn't buy one again, and can't recommend that anyone else does, either. The bin is fine, but get a different lid.