I like my Clicgear reasonably well, and I'll use it as long as it lasts. I don't plan on buying another one though. While the frame itself is built to last, most of the components are just plastic. I had a nut come loose from the brake hammer a few weeks ago while on a trip and it quickly rendered the cart borderline unusable. While it's nice that Clicgear sells replacement parts through their website, I learned that they don't keep all of them stocked, including the part you'll probably need. Ultimately, I was able to solve the problem for about 42 cents by pushing the cart two blocks through my little inner city neighborhood to the nearest hardware store and just finding a replacement nut.
I'm with the others in having a very different experience with the ClicGear I have than you.
My daughter has punished the crap out of her ClicGear for four years now. In that time, I've replaced or repaired the following:
- The brake spring (a $4 part, so I got two extra as well).
That's it. She's shoved Gatorade bottles, 32-oz. steel drink bottles, water bottles, etc. in the cup holder thing (the XL cup holder, the skinny one is not all that useful). She's got the cooler bag that goes between the back wheels. She's got the cart mitts, the adjustable umbrella holder. The Cozy (the bag doesn't twist - most don't, but her stand bag sometimes would). She loves the seat, too, and uses that all the time.
She's not one to check on screws or nuts or bolts, but the Sun Mountains (my golf team has six) have had screws and bolts fall out five or six times, and they see far less use than my daughter's ClicGear.
FWIW, the Sun Mountain is about three pounds lighter than the ClicGear. The ClicGear's frame is a fair amount thicker