Rubbermaid FastTrack Garage Storage Utility Hooks, 5 Piece, All in One Rail Hook Kit and Tool Organizer, Heavy Duty for Wall/Shed/Garden

(1127 reviews)

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$39.98

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(50000 available )

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139 Ratings
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Reviews
  • Larry D Thornton

    > 3 day

    This is a great system,easy to install and the hangers can be placed where you need by sliding or quick unatach and place elsewhere.It gave my garage more space and makes it easy to find stuff.I recommend buying your own anchors,the ones provided are crap,i purchased the drywall anchors that are rated for 50 pds and used 8 of them on each section,holds my electric grinder,anvil vise attached to a 2x6 board which i placed tool sets and whatever on making a lot of weight,holds it up well.This is a great system

  • M G

    > 3 day

    Pretty handy system. I installed this in the garage as a way to get some of the junk off the floor and it works perfectly for that and was relatively simple to install. I do wish it came with more accessories for the price though. It looks a bit bare currently so I guess Ill have to bite the bullet and spring for some more hooks, etc.

  • Tader

    18-04-2025

    Supports heavy tools and was easy to install. I would like to see more variation in the hooks that are available.

  • G. Fleming

    > 3 day

    Rubbermaid seems to be the Apple of garage storage -- stylish and pricy. I committed to Fasttrack ecosystem for a garage refinishing project, and I like it a lot. It is the classic give away the razor and sell the blades pricing model... the rails are quite reasonable but the accessories range from expensive to exorbitant. This particular kit was one of the last items I purchased. It includes 3 smaller, lighter weight hooks, one heavier weight multipurpose hook, a 32 rail and a mounting kit. In retrospect, I should have started with a kit... the kits seem to be the only items that ship with instructions. I bought this kit mainly for the smaller, lighter weight hooks. The are extremely useful in some cases, and the pre-packaged hits are currently the ONLY way to get them. They do not even appear on the Rubbermaid web site. I cant even guess what they are thinking, unless they are trying to keep the price of the kit down, but would prefer to sell heavier-weight $10-$20 hooks to folks who would really prefer to buy the lighter ones for $5. Unfortunately this kind of predatory pricing seems to be typical of an otherwise excellent product line. The rail consists of a metal backing that mounts to the wall, and a black vinyl front surface that snaps or slides onto the backing and actually supports the hooks and other accessories. I used the 32 rail to fill a 30 gap between my garage doors. I trimmed the rail itself to fit with a reciprocating saw and metal cutting blade. A hacksaw would also have worked fine, but I am running a continuous strip around all 4 walls of my largish two-car garage, and so am doing a lot of trimming. The hacksaw does does do a fine job on the vinyl, though. Rubbermaids videos show the vinyl simply snapping over the mounted rail. That is a little optimistic. If one end is open, it will be much easier to slide the vinyl over the backing, rather than snapping it on. In my case, both ends were flush against the garage door frames and I was forced to snap it on. It is possible to do this with some potentially heavy open-hand blows, but I was doing a total of about 90 feet and that was going to be no fun even for a trained martial artist; I resorted to a heavy rubber mallet. The kit includes Genuine Rubbermaid (i.e., expensive) mounting hardware consisting of a handful of screws and a smaller handful of butterfly-type drywall anchors. This is my first experience with the Rubbermaid hardware - it is not included with the standalone railing - and it works fine; 2-1/2 #8 wood screws and any kind of substantial drywall anchor (for use only where there may not be a stud available) work fine as well, and for about 5% of Rubbermaids price. I do not have any experience with the compatible shelves yet. The shelves themselves are currently in short supply and seem to be priced accordingly -- $10-$12 for a single 48 shelf where they are not in stock, $28-$30 where they are! The other accessories seem to be quite useful and intelligently designed. Do not underestimate the usefulness of the long-handled-tool s-hooks. They are the best (and often the only way) to hang many items other than long-handled tools.

  • Joseph Hinkle

    > 3 day

    works great!

  • Kevin Kozicki

    > 3 day

    I wanted to like this system. Seems nice and adaptable. But whoever designed it, did not write their own instructions.... My studs are 16” and the instructions say each 32” rail must hit 3 and definitely on the ends... Only the rail is exactly 32” long and the mounting holes are recessed. So there is no physical way to hit the studs. Makes no sense.

  • LindaLou

    > 3 day

    Sturdy, easy assembly, holds variety of things.

  • Craig Fiedler

    > 3 day

    New garage, wood paneling, they work and look good doing it.

  • Robert Maiden

    Greater than one week

    A great way to keep your yard tools organized and out of the way. Easy to install.

  • nikki p

    > 3 day

    I used this product(bought here on amazon) with other 32” and 48?” rail tracks with various hooks that came with those kits and an extra double broom handle hook I bought through Rubbermaid amazon site. I also bought a 3-shelf with rail-track kit from Lowe’s 48?”. (See pic) Being a “handy enough” person, who just bought their first driver drill, bit sets etc, I used a few online videos to understand the written instructions better. Steps for 32” tracks are basically: Estimate track placement, StudFinder to find studs, Mark em, place track with a level, Mark and drill 1/8th pilots for 3 sets of 2 stud holes, pilot2 3/8ths holes for drywall anchors, place anchors, screw in all screws etc. The 3/8ths was a surprise. I made-do with a 1/2 in for first rail...took forever to get anchor in. The hardware was nearly sufficient. Plenty of drywall anchors, but I stripped a screw and there were NO extras. That reminds me, I still need to run to the hardware store. :-0 The first two 32” rails took 5 hours. But the 6th one took 25 min from taking out tools/ladder to clean up=easy. Hardest part was getting two rails that match up side-by-side to both share a stud. Especially if your studs are not 16 Inches apart on center (+/- 1/4). I would have still used the rails on just 2 studs but the weight held would be way less than recommended. This is sturdy, and I’m already loving all the garage stuff off the floor.

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