Features
- Package Come with 4pcs Steel wall racks(Each 16 inch), 9 pcs Heavy double hooks(7.8 inch) and Installation accessories.
- The best part of the garage storage system is that the hook can be stuck on the railing and moved on it to meet your actual needs.
- The hook can be buckled on the railing, move freely, and provide customizability to meet all your needs, including extra wide items such as ladders, etc.
- Use as individual 16 inch storage unit or combine for up to 64 inch storage length.All you need is an electric drill and a level to make sure it’s lined up perfectly while mounting on the wall studs.
- Total bearing capacity of storage rack: 600 lbs.It can store heavy objects such as chairs, skis, prams, bicycles, ladders, shovels, rakes or power tools, gardening tools, etc. for years. The rubber coated sleeve prevents the tool from scratching or sliding.
Specifications
Color | Black |
Size | 14PCS |
Unit Count | 4 |
Related Tools
This heavy-duty garage organizing rack includes four 16-inch steel wall rails and nine adjustable double hooks that slide and lock onto the rails, allowing configurations from a single 16-inch unit up to 64 inches when combined. The system supports up to 600 lb total load, features rubber-coated sleeves to protect stored items, and mounts to wall studs using standard hardware (electric drill and level recommended).
HORUSDY 64-Inch Heavy Duty Garage Organization Rack, 14 Packs Max Load 600LB, 4 Packs Rails and 9 Adjustable Hooks, Tool Organizer Rack with Heavy Double Hooks Tracks Review
Why I reached for a track-and-hook system
My garage had the usual problem: long-handled yard tools, a ladder, a string trimmer, and a couple of awkward power tools leaning in a corner like dominoes waiting to fall. Pegboard is great for small items, but for bulky gear I wanted something stronger, cleaner, and adjustable. That’s why I tried the Horusdy rack—a four-rail, hook-based system you can configure from a single 16-inch segment to a 64-inch run.
After a month of day-to-day use, here’s how it actually performs.
Setup and installation
This is one of the easier garage organizers I’ve installed, thanks largely to the modular 16-inch rails. Because each rail is short, hitting studs is simple—especially in garages with nonstandard spacing or obstacles. I mapped studs with a detector, snapped a level line, and worked rail by rail. A drill and level are the only must-have tools; a driver makes things quicker, and I’d recommend a 3/32"–1/8" pilot bit if you’re going into dense studs.
The kit includes mounting hardware. For light to moderate loads it’s fine, but if you plan to push the capacity, I’d upgrade to quality wood or structural screws sized to your studs. That’s not a knock on the kit; it’s standard practice for any wall system claiming high load capacity. I used 2.5-inch wood screws into studs and felt fully confident.
Rails butt together cleanly for a 64-inch run. The seams are nearly invisible once the hooks and tools are up. If you prefer to break the system into two or three zones across the garage, the modularity makes that easy.
Build quality and design
The rails are steel, with a durable black finish that shrugs off scuffs. The nine included hooks are the heavy, double-prong type—each about 7.8 inches deep—with rubber-coated sleeves over the steel. The coating has two jobs: protect your tool surfaces and add a bit of friction so items don’t skate off when bumped. It does both well. There’s no gummy residue or chemical smell, and the coating is evenly applied.
Hook-to-rail engagement is solid. The hooks clip onto the rails and slide freely until you lock them in place; once secured, I couldn’t shake a hook loose even with a loaded ladder. I appreciate that you can reposition hooks without removing the rails or fighting with set screws at odd angles. It’s genuinely adjustable in practice, not just in the brochure.
Fit and finish are good across the set. Nothing looks or feels flimsy, and the overall visual is tidy and understated.
Capacity in real use
Horusdy rates the system at a total of 600 lb. As with any rail system, how you mount it matters more than the number on the box. If you’re anchored into studs and distribute weight across multiple hooks and rails, this rack can handle a serious load. I hung:
- A 24-foot aluminum extension ladder
- A string trimmer and hedge trimmer (with batteries removed)
- A metal snow shovel, push broom, and garden rake
- Two folding chairs
- A coil of 100 ft extension cord
That’s an honest amount of weight, and the rails didn’t flex or creak. The hooks didn’t sag or rotate under load. Could I push it further? Probably, but at that point I’d want lag screws and to be very intentional about load distribution. For typical homeowner gear, this is more than enough capacity.
The hook system: strengths and limits
The double-hook style is the star here. It’s fantastic for:
- Long-handled tools (shovels, rakes, brooms)
- Ladders (up to medium/heavy duty)
- Power tools with D handles or front guards (string trimmers, hedge trimmers)
- Coiled hoses and extension cords
- Folding chairs, sawhorses, and similar flat items
The flip side: double hooks aren’t ideal for very small or odd-shaped items. There are no single-prong hooks or narrow specialty holders in the box. You can get creative—hang two small tools per hook or use a carabiner for bundles—but if you’re looking to store lots of hand tools, clamps, or small accessories, pair this rack with pegboard or add-on hook styles.
Nine hooks across 64 inches is a reasonable start, but you’ll fill them quickly. I’d budget for at least one extra pack of compatible hooks if you have a long tool roster. The rails are robust enough to accommodate additional hooks without crowding if you’re mindful about spacing.
Day-to-day usability
What sets this system apart is the low friction to rearrange it. Seasonal shifts in my garage are inevitable—rakes and leaf blowers give way to shovels and snow thrower accessories. With this rack, I slide and re-lock hooks in minutes, no new holes, no patching. The rubber sleeves keep things quiet; bumping a shovel doesn’t ring the whole wall. I also appreciate how the double hooks let me stack two or three similar items on one station (two brooms and a rake, for example) without things feeling precarious.
The rails stay put. After multiple weeks, nothing has drifted, and the lineup still looks straight. That’s not always the case with lesser systems.
Compared to alternatives
If you’ve used Rubbermaid FastTrack or Gladiator GearTrack, the Horusdy rack sits in a similar lane: steel rails plus interchangeable hooks. The differences I noticed:
- Rails: The 16-inch modules make stud alignment easier than long continuous tracks, but you’ll have more seams. In practice, not a big deal once installed.
- Hook variety: Out of the box, Horusdy’s kit focuses on heavy double hooks. Competing ecosystems have massive accessory catalogs. If you want every niche hook under the sun, a larger ecosystem may be more flexible—but it’s also pricier.
- Value: For what you get—four steel rails and nine heavy hooks—the value is strong. You can build multiple functional zones without buying a second kit.
What I’d change
- More hook diversity in the box. Including two single-prong or deep cradles would broaden its utility for odd-shaped tools.
- Hardware upgrade option. The included screws work, but offering an “HD mounting kit” with structural screws would match the 600 lb claim and save a hardware store trip.
- Clearer piece-count labeling. The “14-piece” designation can be confusing; what matters are the four rails and nine hooks.
None of these are dealbreakers, but they’re worth noting.
Tips for a better install
- Find every stud and mark a continuous level line before you drill. The end result looks cleaner and supports more weight.
- If you’re loading heavy (ladders, multiple power tools on one rail), use quality wood or structural screws into studs.
- Start with hooks placed wider than you think you need, then slide them inward as you hang tools. It minimizes rework.
- Group by season or task: yard tools in one zone, home repair in another. The system shines when it’s intentional.
Who it’s for
- Homeowners who want a sturdy, compact way to tame long-handled tools, ladders, and bulky gear
- DIYers who value reconfigurability as projects and seasons change
- Renters allowed to mount into studs—because it’s modular, you can take it with you and leave only a few patched holes
If your main challenge is small parts and hand tools, look at a bin-and-pegboard system instead, or pair one with this rack.
Final recommendation
I recommend the Horusdy rack. It hits the important marks: steel construction, genuinely adjustable hooks, straightforward installation, and enough load capacity to put real trust in it. The modular 16-inch rails make it easy to mount cleanly on any stud layout, and the double hooks handle the most common garage clutter exceptionally well. You’ll likely want a few extra hooks and, if you’ll load it heavily, upgraded screws—but those are minor asks for a system that’s this sturdy and this adaptable. For organizing the heavy, awkward tools that never sit right on shelves, it’s a smart, high-value upgrade to any garage.
Project Ideas
Business
Garage Organization + Installation Service
Offer a home service installing the rail-and-hook system, targeting homeowners, landlords and vacation-rental managers. Service includes site survey, custom layout, professional stud-mounted installation and optional labeling/photograph inventory. Pricing model: base fee for 1–2 rails + per-rail charge and hook/kit markup; upsells: lighting, shelving, pegboard, painting. Marketing: local Facebook groups, Nextdoor, flyers at hardware stores. Profit drivers: labor, bulk kit purchase discounts, seasonal promotions.
Small-Business Retail Display Kits
Package the rails and hooks as modular retail displays for boutique shops, pop-ups and farmers market vendors. Sell pre-configured kits (countertop 16", wall 48", mobile panel) with assembly instructions and branding options (custom stickers or painted rails). Revenue channels: direct online sales (Etsy/Shopify), wholesale to local retailers, B2B bundles. Add-on services: custom layout consulting, out-of-the-box merchandising plans, and rental for events.
Tool-Library or Neighborhood Gear Rental
Start a community rental service for infrequently used items (ladders, folding chairs, snow blowers, garden tools). Use wall rails in a small storage unit to display and secure rentable items; hooks make swap-out and inventory simple. Membership or per-rental pricing plus deposit. Operations: simple booking system (Square or Calendly), clear labeling, regular maintenance checks. Scale by partnering with local community centers and marketing to new homeowners.
Seasonal Swap & Reconfiguration Service
Provide a subscription-style service that reorganizes customers’ storage seasonally (e.g., swap bikes and outdoor gear for holiday décor and snow equipment). Service includes pickup/dropoff of seasonal bins, reconfiguration of rails and hooks for optimal storage, and safe mounting for heavy winter tools. Pricing: flat seasonal fee or monthly subscription. Differentiators: insured installers, photo-before/after, storage add-ons. Market to busy families, professionals, and rental property managers.
Creative
Convertible Bike & Sports Station
Use the rails and rubber-coated double hooks to create a combined storage/display wall for bikes, helmets, skateboards, skis and paddles. Mount two or more 16" rails at bike-handle height for secure bike hanging (use double hooks for wheel cradle), then add lower hooks for helmets and skateboards. Use sliding hooks to reconfigure for different bike sizes. Materials/time: drill, level, stud anchors, 1–2 hours. Variation: add a small shelf or magnetic strip above rails for keys and chargers.
Modular Garden & Potting Station
Turn the rail system into a tidy garden center. Mount rails vertically or horizontally to hold shovels, rakes, hoses, folded potting benches and hanging planters. Use the rubber sleeves to protect wood-handled tools. Add a removable plywood tray clipped to hooks as a potting shelf and hang small buckets for soil and seeds. Materials/time: mount rails to studs, cut 1 sheet of plywood for a tray, 2–3 hours. Seasonal tip: rearrange hooks for winter storage of pruners and snow shovels.
Garage Craft & Workshop Wall
Create a customizable workshop organizer: mount a 48–64" span of rails to store power tools, extension cords, clamps, and a fold-down work surface. Use heavy double hooks to hold circular saws, cordless drill holders, and a pegboard section between rails for small tools. The 600 lb capacity means you can store heavy power tool cases safely. Materials/time: rails, pegboard, hooks, 3–4 hours. Add-on: label each hook location for quick inventory.
Mobile Pop-up Market Display
Build a freestanding display by mounting the rails onto a reinforced plywood panel with a wheeled base. Use the adjustable hooks to show items like folding chairs, garden tools or packaged goods at craft fairs or farmer’s markets. The rubber sleeves protect merchandise, and the 16" segments let you create compact displays that snap together. Materials/time: plywood backing, casters, screws, 2–4 hours. Tip: use removable clamps so rails can be taken down for transport.