🦵 Unlock your mobility potential—because your knees deserve the best!
The KneeSled™ is a compact, durable knee rehabilitation device designed to enhance range of motion, flexibility, and joint health after knee replacement surgery or injury. It enables precise, controlled exercises targeting the knee, hamstring, and calf muscles, accelerating recovery and reducing pain. Lightweight and affordable, it’s ideal for daily at-home therapy, helping professionals maintain active lifestyles with confidence.
Item Package Dimensions L x W x H | 14 x 9 x 3 inches |
Package Weight | 0.3 Kilograms |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 11 x 5 x 5 inches |
Brand Name | KNEE SLED |
Warranty Description | 30 Day |
Model Name | Knee Sled |
Color | Blue |
Material | Plastic |
Suggested Users | Unisex-Adult |
Number of Items | 1 |
Manufacturer | Knee Sled |
Part Number | NS101 |
Included Components | Knee Sled |
Size | One Size |
Sport Type | Walking |
A**R
Great for ACL recovery
Great for ACL surgery recovery
B**Y
Expensive, but a nice piece of rehab gear for your post knee-replacement exercises
This does as advertised. Like all home rehab equipment, you get out of it what you put into it. I use this every night before bed and it is helping put range back into my knee. Its better than just using straps with a towel. Its best to use with repetitive pulls to your pressure point, because it doesn't hold your knee flexed unless you're pulling on it. It is very overpriced in my opinion, but it is a quality product that does what its supposed to do.
P**R
Use this to gain motion in bending knee
I had left knee replacement and this was perfect for working on bend in knee. I use it while laying in bed.
M**L
Max foot size 10 for women 8 for men
I purchased this so I could practice my PT at home for an ACL reconstruction and menicus repair surgery. When I peeled off the plastic off the non slip liner for the inside, the non slip liner(black part) lifted with it. So the adhesive quality is questionable. The design is simple and makes it easier to practive heel slides. I initially thought these were resistance bands, but they are not. The handles slip a bit while using it so its not a stable design. Also I wear between a size 9.5 to 10 in women's. That is a 8 for men. So if youre foot is bigger or wide, this isnt going to work for you. It works ok for what it is. I think given the quality of the construction and price point is not reasonable. I am going to keep this though because it does work for my needs and I will need surgery on my other knee too once this one heals. Wanted to give the pros and cons
R**N
A really good item for knee replacement.
The knee sled has been wonderful. Really helps with my physical therapy after my knee replacement surgery. I like how I can pull on the handles to get that ever so slight more of a stretch on my knee. This was well worth the money. So glad I purchased it.
R**T
Handles do not adjust
This is a good concept for helping bend the knee after surgery; however, the handles are supposed to be adjustable and they are not. I need to shorten the length to get a tighter bend and the straps just keep sliding back to the longest setting. It’s frustrating. I have to wrap the straps around my hands several times to hold the shorter length. That hurts my hands. I’m not sure if I’m returning it yet but for the $70 price tag it should work like they said it would.
A**H
poorly designed, will frustrate you
Update after 3 weeks of use:I regret wasting money on this. My foot keeps slipping out and won’t stay on the sled. I now use a strap that has holes to put your foot through. (Two straps sewn together with gaps for hand holds/ foot holds.)I do not use this product at all.Initial review:This could be designed better. It's some cord, a plastic shell and a pad - very inexpensive components for a such an expensive device.. That would be okay if it was designed well but it is not. 1. The handles go from y shape to straight due to cord slippage inside the handle tube. 2. My size 9 foot keeps slipping out. 3. The pad over the foot keeps riding up. 4. The design pulls at the heel only, not at the whole foot in 90 degree angle position so the stretch is compromised (calf and hamstring muscles shortened due to pointed foot). A strap with a loop does a much better job if you place it mid foot or on forefoot. Workaround: use a strap instead and wear a sock so that your foot can slide on a smooth surface. Cost = cost of strap.What I did: I bought 7/16 wood dowel at home depot, cut to length of handle tube, and inserted it in the tubed with the cord adjusted to a Y. Then iIplaced two tightly cinched zip ties on ether side of the plastic piece that tethers the cord to itself below the handle. This made it much easier to maintain a Y shaped with the handles. This is better but my foot still slides out of the cup and still becomes pointed due to slippage of straps pulling on foot cup. pointed. I will work on that tomorrow - there has to be a fix.
K**G
Love it
Really works
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 month ago