I'm putting in 18 holes on a small private course. Nothing fancy, only for friends. I've been scrutinizing the basket market, looking for a good basket at lower than average price since I need so many.I picked up 6 Hive Cross Chains baskets at $70 each, on special. I wasn't sure what I'd get at 30 pounds and I hadn't ever played on a cross chain basket.The day before they arrived I saw a Westlake Weekender II in a store. It was $70 and very similar in design. Wow, was that a flimsy goal. My stomach turned and I tried to cancel the whole order.Luckily it was too late. I assembled the first one and it was a hoot. I've got some machining experience and have a keen eye for manufacturing accuracy. Lemme put it plainly - this disc golf target is the FINEST economical, large scale, powder coated metal item composed of several parts I have ever assembled. EVERYTHING was straight and uniformly painted. It was packed well. And it fit together like a dream.Once assembled it was stout but not heavy. From 20 feet the chains seemed to grab very well, another big worry it passed with honors.Those two bums in my picture are looking at a hole in one I threw from about 150 feet. That disc had some heat on it and the chains snagged 'er and hauled it on home.For $70 this goal was a steal. At $90 normal retail you've got more choices, but only upon overall weight or chain arrangement. No way the quality of construction could be improved much, it's already a wonderfully made piece.No wheel but not needed. Picked it up by myself and carried assembled to several locations around an old cornfield.Just an awesome portable target which grabbed discs like King Kong. Will it rust? Probably. But only way to avoid that is with galvanizing and the only basket on the market under $200 with galvanized parts is the Titan Pro portable. And it weighs 46 pounds, a big difference.I'm thrilled my order wasn't cancelled. These goals are a big winner at this price and weight.