My brother’s business includes a lot of fixing cheaply made consumer crap for businesses that thought it would be durable enough for daily hard use. His mantra:
This is what you get when products are designed for selling, not for using.
As to your cooler, they thought it would sell better with inadequate but $5 cheaper handles. They’re almost certainly right.
You’d think “bucket” was a product whose design was pretty much solved, but apparently not. My old mop bucket that I bought from K-Mart over 20 years ago finally broke the other day (more specifically, the plastic bit the handle attaches to broke off). The bucket actually gets quite a bit of use; as a water conservation method I put it under the spigot while I’m waiting for the water to get hot before I take a shower, so I can save that water for other uses. So I picket up a new bucket while I was at Target yesterday.
The new bucket sucks. The old one was relatively deep, and I could pick it up when it was full of water by just the handle, no problem. The new one is I think the same volume as the old one, but wider and shallower. If I pick it up by the handle only, the water sloshes to one side, quickly making the bucket tip to that side and dumping the water out. You pretty much have to put your other hand on the lip to prevent it from tipping.
Well then the problem is that this is literally the only bucket Target sells, at least at the location I shop at, and I really didn’t feel like going to another store. Ok, that’s not entirely true; they also had a wheeled mop bucket, but that wouldn’t work for my purpose, either.
Try a farm supply store, if there’s one near you. They ought to have buckets galore, in various sizes, shapes, and materials.
I’d recommend the basic 5 gallon white pail, which you can buy empty though you may have seen them containing various things; but, depending on how strong you are, you might not want to wait till it gets too close to full.
If they’re designed right (like the orange Home Depot bucket), they have a ridge and appropriate taper so that they never get completely wedged together.
I just did a search at taarget.com for buckets. The main results were astonishingly limited. And showed a very shallow borderline useless bucket. Which is almost certainly the one that poor @WildaBeast was goaded into buying: Bucket : Target
However, when I added the filter of “cleaning bucket” from their list of filters, suddenly I got many more results and all more plausibly shaped:Bucket (cleaning) : Target.
Still and all, If I want a bucket, that’s a hardware store / janitorial store / Amazon item, not a Target item. They are now a clothing & grocery store + pharmacy with a very small sidelight in housewares. Which once was a strength of theirs.
Yep, that is the exact one. And looking at the reviews, everyone else has the same complaint as me. It has an average rating of two stars, but looking at the distribution the majority of ratings are 1 star.
I am seriously considering returning it, it is that useless of a bucket. And after a brief search I can see Lowe’s has a much more useful looking one. Yes, I really should have waited until I could go to a proper hardware store, but I was already at Target buying groceries, I really wanted a replacement bucket that day, and I really didn’t want to go to another store that day.
I have a 2024 Subaru Cross Trek. I love the car except for one weird thing. It has the fob that you have to have somewhere on your person to unlock the doors and start the car. When I approach the driver’s side (say after shopping and I want to put something in the back seat) the driver’s door unlocks. I then have to open that door and push the button on the arm rest to unlock the back passenger door on that side. If I approach the car on the other side (the front passenger’s door), all of the doors unlock. It makes no sense. They should all unlock from the driver’s side so the driver, who has the fob can easily put things in the back seat. I grit my teeth every time I have to unlock the back seat door from inside.
Have you gone through the settings on the infotainment center? My car (23 Hyundai) lets me select whether walking up to to door unlocks just that door or all.
You might check if there’s a way to configure that behavior. My Lexus had an option buried in its dashboard computer to switch driver-side unlock from driver’s door to every door.
Mine (a Toyota) was exactly the same. There was a way to going into the settings on the central panel that the dealer knew, and I’m sure was described in the manual, but it’s strange to have this lack of symmetry as the default.
To put it bluntly: it’s safer for a lone woman to unlock only the door she is directly going into, instead of every door of her vehicle. And less liability for the manufacturer to make the safer option the default.
So the default is to make it safe for women drivers, but not women passengers? I guess on the assumption that the driver will be male, and able to leap over the hood and defend her?
The whole thing seems more like “perception of safety” than “actual safety,” but I am not knowledgeable in this area so I defer to those who are.
Are you sure you have to push the button to open the back door. My fob unlocks only the front door, but when I pull the handle on that door ,all the other locks unlock
If the Bad Guy is hiding on the passenger side of the car, presumably the passenger (male or female) will see him when approaching the vehicle. The lone driver will not.
And, as several have noted, the default can be changed.