We have decided to create this blog in order to assist people with their purchasing decision when contemplating buying a jumping castle.
While people are increasingly looking to the Internet as an option for making a purchase, it can be with some trepidation. The buyer relies on images of the product being sold, as well as written descriptions, and occasionally video content of the products. However, in all honesty these are a poor substitute for being able to see and touch a product in person.
It is worth noting though that in a lot of department stores such as K-mart etc., the customer will not necessarily have the opportunity to see and feel a product other than what they can see on the box on the shelf.
Like anything there are advantages and disadvantages with making an online purchase as opposed to an instore purchase and I have experienced them all as a regular online purchaser. Which is why I thought it was important to create this blog to help fill in some of the gaps for people who are contemplating purchasing a jumping castle for their children.
Matt Rose
PROPRIETOR - JUMP CITY
Each of our jumping castles is designed similarly to their larger and more expensive commercial cousins requiring a continuous air flow blower to ensure that they remain inflated. All of our bouncers, even the cheapest, include an electric blower with them in the box.
There are some home use jumping castles out there that are designed to remain inflated and therefore do not require a continuous air flow blower. You should be aware that this design is more prone to damage and deflation because the jumping castle has a perfect seal of air meaning that air has nowhere to escape when you've got several children bouncing on them at once.
Blast Zone jumping castles are designed to continually "leak" air so that they have plenty of give for when children bounce. This doesn't mean that the castle deflates because it is contantly having hundreds of litres of air pumped into it, replacing immediately the air that is displaced as children bounce. The advantage with this design is that even if your jumping castle gets small holes in it, this will have virtually no effect on the operation of the bouncer.
To view our range of jumping castles click here.
We often have people ask what our jumping castles are made out of. The technical answer is oxford cloth and commercial grade phthalate free PVC. This material in the major structural parts of our bouncers and slides and feels similar to the type of material they used to make those big green tents that the Scouts and other groups would use.
The material is not at all like the plastic which is used in inexpensive blow up pools and toys which is easily punctured and torn. The material also is not like the material you may have seen in some home use jumping castles sold at Target, ALDI, Toys R Us etc., which feels thin and flimsy and similar to a fly sheet used in camping.
On surfaces used for bouncing, the material in Blast Zone bouncers has a smooth finish minimising friction for your children's skin and is of the same type and strength used in many commercial jumping castles: something you will not find in other domestic jumping castles.
Our jumping castles are put together using needle and thread, just like the more expensive commercial inflatables. The advantage of this is that they can be repaired relatively easily using a needle and thread and the design has a certain amount of "give" so that when children bounce air pressure is being dispersed throughout the entire jumping castle and out of its stitching rather than too much air pressure in one place causing it to pop like cheaper jumping castles do.