• Retractable; sidewall and front wall mount. 3 down each side and 3 across the front
  • All Stainless and nylon chassis for smooth quiet function. No rust- no rattle
  • Snaps out for use-snaps back in and stores flush in the wall and out of the way.
  • Stainless eye retracts out 1"- room enough for 2 large Ratchet S Hooks or plenty of rope.
  • Lifetime Warranty

Easy to install and slide out of the way when not needed; who can ask for more. When I purchased my Silverado 1500 in 2013, the only tie points were in the four corners, down low. Had a set of these installed when I had the back Rhino-lined and instantly fell in love with the convenience and ease of use. So, when I upgraded to a 2500HD, I bought this set and installed them myself. It was rather easy once I figured how to slip them into the holes in the bed. You may not need three tie points along each side and the front but the holes are there and I could not find a better deal for fewer bull rings. If you are worrying about strength, consider this. I use ratchet straps (about 1" wide from Home Depot) and have never had an issue with the rings pulling out. In fact, I broke a strap from over tightening and there was no damage to the ring or the truck bed.

These work fantastic and look great. Be warned, it is easy to install them improperly. Please read the directions. I installed them incorrectly the first time as well because I didn't read the directions. I thought how hard can it be? There is a chromed steel plate that you have to fish behind the bed wall. You must remove the screw for it to slip behind the bed wall. Once it's behind the bed wall, then you re-insert the screw and tighten it down. Once installed correctly, the holding power is very good. You would have to rip the wall of the bed before they came out. If any of the reviewers that had them not hold properly, double check how you installed them. They hold pretty well if you don't get the chrome plate behind the bed wall, just not as secure as with.

I got these to add additional tie down points to my new 2017 Colorado using the OEM holes that were already in the bed. The install for the full set of 9 took maybe 20 or 30 minutes taking my time. In my research for tie downs I have seen some forum postings about the screws that hold the tie downs in the bed/together coming loose over time and requiring re-tightening so that's something I'll keep an eye on. To try and lower the chance of the screws coming loose I used some purple, low strength thread locker on all of the screws during my install.

This is an excellent product. It's a little cheaper if you buy the set of 9 versus buying in pairs. While I have a lot of cases where i can use these, the driving need was to have a way to tie off gas cans from above in the bed of my Silverado. The low tie points that come with the truck don't prevent tips. These have been mega-useful and were easy to install. My truck has a Rhino Liner which some posters have complained about. Use a box cutter, work slowly and carefully, and trace around the plugs beneath the liner. Once you have it cut or mostly cut, jab into the plug with your knife, push a screwdriver into the hole you jabbed into the plug, and pry out the plug. Insert the bull ring and tighten. They work well. It took me about an hour to an hour and a half to install 9 bull rings in a truck with a spray in liner. I recommend this product.

Wow. Why didn't I do this before? About half way through moving from one house to another, I thought it would really help to have more tie downs. I found these on Amazon and I'm so glad I purchased them. They arrived quickly, installed smoothly and work great. I am a 61 year old woman and it took about 20 minutes to install all 9. I installed them on my GMC Canyon. My bedliner did not allow them to face up, so I put them in facing down. It doesn't seem like this is going to be an issue. I read somewhere that they could go either way. To get the old plugs out I quickly drilled through the center of the plastic and popped them out with a screwdriver. This saved my paint because they did not want to come out easily by prying with a screwdriver. Once the hole was empty, I just ran the screw out almost to the end of the Bull Ring and popped them in without removing the screw. I found that if I tested the retractability feature and if they didn't stay up then I didn't have the metal plate all the way inside the hole, so I had to re-insert a couple of them. Even with that, it didn't take any time at all to get them securely installed. Now they retract upwards and stay that way until I need them. I may just leave them down, though because they barely stick out from the liner. Even so, they are easily accessible. I moved my first furniture with them yesterday and they worked GREAT!

After reading the previous reviews with spray in bedliners, I called it out to the Line-X techs to make sure I could still install these no issues. After you get the first one in, you can quickly install the others. I ordered the 9 pack as it was the best value and price out there. Tested them out with a cargo net when i moved some patio furniture and they worked great. Would highly recommend.

I am very satisfied with the quality of this product, and how easy it was to install them. My truck got Line-X applied over the plastic covers that need to be removed to install the bull rings. That made the installation harder than it needs to be, but not a big deal. I used an utility knife to cut the Line-X around the perimeter of the plastic covers, and then removed the X-Line layer and the plastic cover. That left some of the paint exposed where the covers were at, but the nylon base of the bull rings covered the Line-X and exposed paint and everything looks perfect.

Product is amazing. You can see the engineering that goes into this product!! Works VERY simply, and fits perfectly. The ring will LOCK OUT or you can push. GREAT CONCEPT Some installation tips: 1) Take screw completely out for installation. 2) Pull on ring until it CLICKS, and locks in place. 3) hold unit so the ring SLANTS UPWARD. (important, I finally got this right). 4) install in the hole in this order A) pull outer face to the edge of the ring B) Insert bottom of rear plastic part into hole C) with unit "riding on the bottom of the hole", insert stainless plate in the top of the hole, then pull full UNIT TO THE TOP OF THE HOLE, with plate inside the top of the hole D) the bottom of the metal should slip right in the bottom of the hole. (see pics) 5) Hold the unit and install the screw. Once you install one the rest is easy. GREAT PRODUCT

Perfect set for the top 9 spots around the 2016 Chevy Colorado's bed. Mounted these first, then installed a BedRug over them, and used an awl and carpet knife to pinpoint them and slice a slit to pull them through. No, they don't make noise. They are fully retractable and fully useful (even with a BedRug for the dog). Super useful. The real load limit per ANY hook you add to the bed is the bedwall's load limit, not the thing you bolt into the bed wall. The my Chevy's truck bed wall will fold/bend/cave/dent/fail at 250 lbs force per square inch. These things will fail/break/collapse at 1,000 lbs which is long after they've ripped out of the truck's bed wall. Think about what you're doing and have fun doing it.

Tie downs work great and are easy to install. Just pop out the plastic OEM cover, loosen the screw on the Bull Ring tiedown, insert into the hole in the bed, and tighten. I had all 9 installed in 15 minutes. They seem very strong and will easily hold down anything I could haul in my truck. I do have the factory spray in bed liner and it did not affect the mounting at all.