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Deluxe Mini Play Cube by Anatex
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Deluxe Mini Play Cube by Anatex

List Price: $129.99
Our Price: $109.99
You Save: $20.00 (15%)
Shipping:Free
SKU:

TJ-IT80-U98O

In Stock
Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Description:

Our award-winning play cube provides five fun dynamic activity panels that reward curiosity and build critical cognitive skills. A¿wonderful activity center for home, doctors' offices, schools, and waiting rooms.¿ Plays on the floor or table top. Product Description A wonderful activity center for home, doctors? offices, schools, and waiting rooms. Children learn counting, cooperative play, alphabet, and eye-hand coordination. Plays on the floor or table top. Appropriate for children ages 3 years old and up. Measures 12" X 12" X 24"

Features:

Parent's Choice Gold Winner


Five fun toys include: Mini Rollercoaster Express, Pathfinder, Counting Abacus, Pathfinder, Fun Gears, and¿Learn the Alphabet


The ultimate sensory experience


Made of high quality wood.


Washes easily with mild soap & warm water.


Product Details:
Product Length: 12.0 inches
Product Width: 12.0 inches
Product Height: 24.0 inches
Product Weight: 13.0 pounds
Package Length: 14.5 inches
Package Width: 14.5 inches
Package Height: 14.0 inches
Package Weight: 15.0 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 66 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review: 4.0 ( 66 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.


Most Helpful Customer Reviews

89 of 93 found the following review helpful:

3Shoddy manufacturingSep 16, 2009
By D. Carraway
First off, the short version: if you're not comfortable enough with tools to fix what's wrong with this toy, don't buy it. That, or check the packaging and product carefully -- if it claims a 2007 manufacture date and says it was made in China, or if on inspection you see anything wrong, pack it back up and return it as defective. At least some versiosn of this thing are at best poorly made and fragile, and at worst dangerous.

I'm not going to address the fun or educational aspects of this toy, just the manufacturing issues some have reported. Bought one for my daughter in September 2009. It arrived in a box prominently labeled "Made in China" and with a claimed manufacture date in 2007. Whatever factory in China accepted Anatex's outsourcing contract hasn't yet mastered quality control, because there were quite a number of manufacturing defects:

Imprecise assembly: fasteners and brackets are not accurately placed, causing parts to be loose or misaligned. This is most evident on the bead maze on the top and the "abacus" sliding-bead panel on the side, which is mounted on four stand-off brackets. Mount those brackets in the wrong places and the screws used to attach the panel either won't reach or will be under enough strain they'll pull out (it's very soft pine, and screw threads easily pull loose.) Up on the bead maze, some of the wire ends are mounted crooked, resulting in the wires actually touching or just passing so close to one another that the beads can't pass by.

Mismatched, incorrect parts choices: speaking of that panel, one of the screws used to mount it was the incorrect size, and had not only pulled loose but was loose in the box when I unpacked it; it doesn't match any of the others used with identical mountings, nor does it match any other screw found on the entire unit. There's no excuse for that one short of basic incompetence combined with inadequate or nonexistent quality control.

Incorrect gluing: Once again with the abacus panel -- it's held together with glue. Nothing wrong with that if it's done right, but it wasn't -- see, to make a good glue joint you need clean surfaces, a lot of contact area and a proper amount of glue inbetween, plus a good pressure fit while the glue dries. Well, the surfaces were clean and the joint more or less correctly designed, but the glue was _missing_. What was holding it together? A dab of red paint around the corner. Splendid. Paint ain't adhesive, guys, and the whole point of a glue joint is you put some actual _glue_ in there somewhere. As it was, two of the four joints had popped open, causing the rods to dislodge from their sockets and scarring the surface. Those beads are small enough to be a choking hazard if they get loose, so having those glue joints work is important.

Inadequate torque: Ah, the gift that keeps on giving. About a third of the screws and other fasteners in the unit were loose because they hadn't been torqued down hard enough. Another third had stripped the threads out of the soft wood, because they'd been torqued too hard. The remaining third were in a magical inbetween state which might even have been correct torque -- but I suspect it's just coincidence. As I mentioned, this is soft wood, and proper torque matters. (n.b. for nonmechanical types: "torque" roughly means "how hard you twist the screws.")

What else was wrong? Well, there were plenty of inexplicable gouges, scrapes and dings on the surface, even though it was properly packed and nothing in the box had a chance to impact the surface. Plenty of people have commented on that -- it means the factory in China that produced them was working too fast and/or wasn't well tooled for the job, so parts were being thrown around.

So, should you buy this toy? Well, chances are your kid(s) will love it. So if you want one, fine, but be prepared to inspect it very thoroughly when it comes out of the box. Test every screw to ensure it's snug and not loose or stripped. Pop the little plastic caps off the axles on the gear side and check that the locking washers are tight. Check the glue joints and be prepared to spend a little time gluing and clamping. Check both ends of every wire in the bead maze to ensure they're firmly stuck in their mounting holes. Go over all the many dings, gouges and scrapes and smooth out the splintered bits. Find any screws that don't look like they match their companions, gently unscrew them and if they're too short or too fine-pitched in the threads, replace them. While you're at it, attach something heavy to the lower edges on the inside, because it's top-heavy and will tip over the first time your child tries to use it to stand up. Think of it like a toy for both you and your child -- you get a fun evening in the garage fixing everything Anatex's manufacturer did wrong, while showering curses on the consumer-hostile side effects of globalized manufacturing. Then when you're done, your child gets a fun thing to play with.

24 of 27 found the following review helpful:

5Made in USA, no more stickers, it's been improvedDec 28, 2007
By CA or Bust
Just got mine on December 28, 2007. Don't know if previous versions were made in China, but mine has "Made in USA" written on the packaging as opposed to the versions received by other reviewers. Further, mine has ink (nontoxic as stated on the box) on the gears rather than stickers as has been used on previous iterations. I tried scraping the ink off, but it seems pretty durable. This is a great activity cube. Maybe Anatex got the message and made improvements on past complaints. If this is the case, kudos to them! Needs a good cleaning to get the dust off, but this is par for a toy implementing wood. Amazon Prime rocks - overnight shipping for this big toy was only $3.00!

14 of 15 found the following review helpful:

4Stickers are not permanent!Mar 27, 2007
By Sharmin Panjvani "Preschool Teacher and Mom"
I ought this for my daughter for her 1st birthday. She loves the bead maze at the top and she goes round and round the cube exploring all the different sides!

So as the title would suggest, the stickers on the cog wheels are starting to come off (after 1 week). This doesnt affect the functionality of the toy, just the aesthetics. If you are not bothered by some bare cogwheels this is still a great toy!

It stands 2 feet tall to the top of the maze and is the perfect height for little ones. The other 3 sides are: ABC with pictures rotating blocks, Abacus, Sliding plastic pegs. The only side with stickers is the cog wheels so no worries about other sides losing stickers.

If they had made the cog wheels out of wood or had the design painted or imprinted into the plastic this toy would be a 10!

7 of 7 found the following review helpful:

1Deluxe Mini Play Cube by AnatexSep 25, 2009
By K. Gawrys
Very disappointing product. It arrived broken due to poor packaging for shipment. Fortunately, Amazon only offered refunds (no replacements) on the return and we did get our money refunded. The toy was constructed out of low quality plywood. The portion broken during shipping was located on the face containing the "peg maze". If this face breaks during play, the pegs will become a choke hazard. For the cost, I would have expected something more solidly constructed. Not recommended.

6 of 6 found the following review helpful:

1Warning Warning Warning!!!!Oct 29, 2011
By Howard Hinman "hhinman"
We purchased this a couple of months back for our then 8 month old. She loves it and plays quite a bit with it. It's a neat toy. However, is is VERY dangerous given poor manufacturing in one area. One side has some wooden blocks in a grid that is attached to the main unit via 4 L-shaped brackets using some very short wood screws which are very shiny and sharp. We have taken 2 of these screws out of our baby's hands - one was on the way to her mouth when my wife stopped her no less! A third one fell out today and my wife beat the baby to it. These are incredible choking hazards - they are metal screws about 3/8 inch long with a sharp point.

I've just returned from Lowes where I purchased thicker screws to re-attach the block assembly. We will watch carefully to see if they loosen up with play and use bolts with nuts next time if they get loose.

It's a real shame because this is a very nice and engaging toy. It is very dangerous given the situation with the screws however.

See all 66 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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