

🧺 Elevate your laundry game with space-smart, durable drying that fits your lifestyle!
The Leifheit Telegant Wall Dryer and Towel Rail 36 Protect Plus offers 3.6 meters of rustproof drying space via 5 pull-out steel rails, combined with a fixed aluminum towel rail. Its compact, fold-flat wall-mounted design saves space while providing durable, easy-to-use drying for indoor or outdoor use. With a 3-year warranty and proven longevity, it’s a reliable, stylish solution for modern homes.










| ASIN | B000JG1KPY |
| Assembly time | 60 Minutes |
| Batteries required | No |
| Best Sellers Rank | 33,529 in Home & Kitchen ( See Top 100 in Home & Kitchen ) 3 in Wall-Mounted Dry Racks |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (21,560) |
| Date First Available | 8 July 2007 |
| Included components | 1 x wall dryer, 1 pack screws |
| Is assembly required | No |
| Item model number | 83201 |
| Item weight | 960 Grams |
| Number of pieces | 1 |
| Product Dimensions | 36.83 x 71.12 x 10.16 cm; 960 g |
| Warranty description | 3 years. |
K**M
We are buying another.
Excellent product, well made useful and robust, purchased 8 years ago and fitted to an outside wall. Used virtually every week up to now, it has just broken from wear and tear. I think that 8 years out in the weather and in constant use speaks for itself. We have just ordered another one to replace it. Hope it's as good as the first one.
A**R
Neat, small and great space saver.
I love this foldaway clothes airer, once it’s used I know how to fold it away and open it. At first it can be a bit tight as you open it and put it away, as it looks it could break if you force it a bit to hard. I bought three, two with the bar underneath and the other without it. It looks very neat, I just managed to mount it on the wall and I just hope it last. So far so good, enough for my clothes.
A**R
great for small occupancy homes...
Leifheit Telegant 30 Protect Wall Dryer, Foldable Clothes Drying Rack: I bought two of these wall drying racks as the traditional/portable clothes dryers are a pain to set up and to put away each time you want to use them, and I also don't have a lot of storage space so these foldable wall drying racks were a great solution for what to me was/is a reasonable price. Each rack comes in its own box and is supplied with two screws and two plugs, so you will need a pencil, drill/drill bits, spirit level, hammer, and a screwdriver to be able to fit them to a wall; just to add, when fitting them, you do need to fully open up the rack/s in order to both see and to access the screw slots for the purpose of marking up the screw positions on the wall. In my case, I marked up one end of the rack and left some excess thread on the first screw so that I could then slot the rack on to this first screw, thus allowing me to then spin the open rack to its desired position and to get it level prior to marking up the second screw. I then closed/rotated the rack out of the way on its first screw whilst I drilled the second screw, again leaving some excess thread. After-which, I then rotated/slotted the closed rack on to the second screw before opening the rack up again so that I could then tighten both screws to the point whereby the rack was both secure to the wall and also easy to remove/refit for cleaning. Once fitted, these wall mounted racks can be kept closed when not in use, or opened up so that you have just one or five wires pulled out/visible, and there is also a bit of excess at each end of the racks 'opened doors' to be able to hang a few oddments of smaller clothing if needed; I've also used some clothes pegs to hang the clothes between the nearest wire to the wall to the wire furthest away from the wall when all five wires (or 10 wires in total in my case) have not been enough. The only downside to these racks is that the wires are a bit on the flimsy side, and as such, they do tend to bend easily when hanging very wet/heavy items such as bath towels, this [bending] then makes it bit harder to close the rack up again but with a bit of patience and a few seconds of fiddling to line each of the wires up as they're pushed back in to their home position, closing of the rack is then possible again. All in all, these wall mounted drying racks have been a God-send for me personally, as not only were they easy to fit and good value for money, but they have also served there purpose both aesthetically and practically for my weekly washload needs; whether the same could be said for 'daily family washloads' is another matter entirely due to the flimsy wires.
A**E
Excellent idea and sturdy
These are a brilliant idea and very sturdy. I would say you need two 7.2m ones to put a full load on comfortably. My recommendation, would be to place them above a window so you can open the windows wide.. and essentially you are drying outside(ish). The breeze is able to help them dry and if there is rain, but no strong wind, you can use them on wet days. I have a branded heated airer which wasn’t cheap and these are far better and take up literally no space on the whole and zero floor space. The airer is bulky and even when nothing it on it it is a pain to store. Once away, you don’t even notice. We have them above the bedroom window. It does block out some light, but this is a small price to pay.
R**N
Perfect for Utility Room
Was looking for something compact and functional for utility, to hang up the MANY baby aprons and cloths and tea towels that we now end up washing every few days. Before I had hangers all over the place on random doors or the oven or backs of chairs. Now it's all nicely contained hanging above the washing machine and packs down to nothing when not using it. Handy having a towel rail too as we have a small sink . I've not overloaded it with heavy things but it seems really nice quality and easy to use.
R**N
Better than I hoped
being a bit OCD I over research before any purchase, then end up torn as cant find anything that covers everything I want. Not with this. I bought 2 x the largest ones and mounted side by side along my back alleyway under a canopy so I m not having laundry on a horse around the house. Main benefits to me: * folds almost flat so not always out and ugly or in the way * each rail slide independently (not overtaking the ones before and after), so as I remove dried items I just slide that bar along to reduce the projection * If I want to walk under the lines without whacking the dangling clothes (eg getting the bikes out), I temporarily slide the lines in with clothes on them, then pull back out after * easy for 1 person to put up
B**S
Sturdy and roomy
Living in a small house with not much practical space for airing laundry, and having a 9 month old crawler looking for new ways to wreak havock, this wall dryer has solved two problems. It is surprisingly sturdy, and will take a family sized bath towel on the metal bar plus a good amount of washing on the five pull out rails. There is also space to hand a couple of bras or other small items at the ends of the pull out rail supports. We have positioned ours about three feet above the storage heater in our hallway which is ideal as the bath towel does not rest on the heater at all. The width of each pull out rail is generous enough to take a pillow case plus a pair of socks or a flannel, and I feel the pictues do not do this item justice, it feels well made and I am confident it will get plenty of use for some time yet.
A**A
It lovely but
It's lovely but water comes in and its tricky to open, but overall it's very useful
A**R
Great space saver
S**N
Great small clothes line, put it at my height and fits my whole wash
C**J
Review of the smaller, 28" model: This thing is great! It's so nice not to be tripping over or constantly moving drying racks, or dodging stuff on hangers hung on the shower rod. True, there is not tons of space between the rods, but it doesn't seem to take much longer to dry than when it's more spread out. The 70 model has five rods, so I have dried 5 long-sleeved shirts with room for some socks, or a few pairs of yoga pants and a couple of t-shirts. The picture I uploaded shows a shirt, 3 yoga pants, and several pairs of socks drying in harmony. As I must flip them over the rods, due to mounting height, I can only dry 2 pairs of jeans at a time. I have not used clothespins, but they would work on this. The rods are designed to have a little give, which does not mean they're flimsy. My walls are plaster lath, so installation was easy. In my opinion, the screws and mollys that came with it are sturdy enough. Having said that, I don't hang stuff to dry sopping wet - I fold and squeeze water out, then roll into a towel and lean on it with my knee (planning on getting a spinner eventually for my hand-washing). I wash my towels at the laundromat, thus haven't tried those on the Telefix yet, but I am so happy with this, I plan to get the 100 model which is 40" wide, and has 8 rods. If that works out, I may not need the drying racks at all, yay! Update: February, 2020 Five years later, and I still think it's great! I use it at least once a week and it looks and works as well as ever. I have also gotten a spin dryer for my hand-washing (centrifugal water extractor - no heat), and wow, no soppy towels from blotting, and things dry much faster! I got the Laundry Alternative Nina model and have been very happy with that as well.
P**M
My wife has fallen in love with this line, hangs all her items that can go in the clothes dryer.
M**K
Balkon küçük oldu için en küçük birimi aldım. Orta boy da olabilirmiş. Kurulumu son derece kolay, kullanışlı. Tavsiye ederim.
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