Sturdy
Works perfectly in the garage. I have not had any problems with it sliding. Heavy and sturdy. Read more
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In Stock
In Stock
| manufacturer | Guardian |
|---|---|
| brand | Guardian |
| model | DH-PB-2 |
| item_model_number | DH-PB-2 |
| manufacturer_part_number | DH-PB-2 |
| best_sellers_rank | #5,773 in Automotive ( See Top 100 in Automotive ) #15 in Parking Gadgets |
| date_first_available | November 27, 2025 |












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Customers say
Customers find the parking stop works well and appreciate its quality.
Works perfectly in the garage. I have not had any problems with it sliding. Heavy and sturdy. Read more
Great product to help car my truck parked precisely in our garage. I was thinking this smaller version of the parking curb might move around when the truck tire bumped up against it, but it really stays in place very well without permanently fixing it to the floor. Can highly recommend. Read more
I see a lot of the rubber parking curbs just like this in half the size or smaller so you would need to buy 2 of them for each tire, but this long curb is just long enough so that the front wheels of your tires both touch them when you park. I try not to go so far forward that the tires would push against the curb, but it does stop the car and this is a pretty heavy long block of rubber, I haven't put any glue or screw or nail or anything to fasten it or hold it down onto my garage floor. It has never moved, got pushed back, it stops your car and stays put. It does have a rubber smell because that us what it is, but it's not going in my house, it's in my garage so I didn't mind the smell and it faded in a few days. It's not that bad at all, and I have a Beagle nose I can't stand smells. I have boxes all along my garage walls so I don't want to smash my belongings and this has been a great way to ensure I don't smash them, and it guides me so that my car is not too close to the side walls too. I recommend this one, I wouldn't get the ones that are shorter those don't look as sturdy and I can imagine those would move around unless you glue or screw them down. Read more
Well made, very strong, will be hard to dive over it..Great stop when backing up.. Read more

These are about 1.5 feet long by 5 inches wide by 4 inches tall. They're heavy but easy to handle. They stay in place and do work well. I keep these in my truck in case I need to chock the wheels. I've used them a few times when I was working under my truck and they work fine. These are worth the investment. Read more
came ahead of scheduled delivery and was quality was discribed. Read more
Great Product. Put two on our garage to keep the wife from hitting the wall. Was simple to install and they are made from heavy duty rubber. Very happy with them Read more
Wow! I was pleasantly surprised at the substantial weight of this rubber, 6-foot parking curb by Guardian. This curb was just what we needed to reclaim a portion of our property for safe parking in front of a power transformer. Our application is on a gravel parking spot and spiking the curb through the gravel and into the ground could not have been easier. Anchors or stakes do not come with this parking curb, but there are 1/2" holes to allow for anchoring. There are not a lot of options for stakes. I settled on these 14β rebar spikes (shaped like giant nails), which worked like a charm. Unfortunately, only 3 spikes come in a pack and this curb requires four. That being said, two 3-packs of these rebar stakes are cheaper than any (one) of the 4-pack staking options I could find on Amazon. The parking curb is long enough to ensure contact by at least one wheel when parking and will contact both wheels of a smaller car that is aligned properly. The curb has readily accomplished what I wanted β it allows me to back in with confidence and park as close as possible without hitting the electrical transformer. The Guardian Parking Curb is stable so far. I determined the correct position by first carefully parking in the desired location (about an inch away from the power transformer). I placed the curb behind my wheels and butted it up against them. Then I measured the distance between the edge of the curb and the transformer slab. I moved the vehicle forward out of the way, added an extra inch to the measurement and repositioned the curb, keeping it square to the slab. I drove in the rebar stakes through the holes with a mini-sledge hammer and the rubber curb stayed right where I had placed it. I backed the car up into the curb and the end result was the desired, very close parking job! Read more








