
- #CONTOURS BITSY COMPACT FOLD STROLLER VS BABY ZEN YO YO HOW TO#
- #CONTOURS BITSY COMPACT FOLD STROLLER VS BABY ZEN YO YO UPGRADE#
The Yoyo+ has the smallest seat, only 17 inches tall, and the lowest weight capacity of the strollers we tested, at 40 pounds (the weight of an average 5-year-old), so you may not be able to use it for as long as you would the Minu.

The removable seat cushion is well-padded, and is machine washable, unlike the Minu’s. Like the Minu’s, the Yoyo+ harness adjusts to three shoulder heights. Sometimes, the seat can get stuck, or the wheels get in the way, and you have to pry the stroller apart from the latch or orient the wheels to get it upright. The flip side of this complex fold is that the Yoyo+ is the only stroller that can be unfolded with one hand, but you have to give it a good snap of the wrist to ensure that it fully unfurls.
#CONTOURS BITSY COMPACT FOLD STROLLER VS BABY ZEN YO YO HOW TO#
(This is apparently a common enough occurrence that the manual tells you how to prevent it, but it takes practice to develop the muscle memory.) There is no way to do the fold with one hand while holding a child. I would also squish my fingers during the final step of the fold because I would instinctively place them in between the frame. Oftentimes, I would have to fiddle with the wheels to get the Yoyo+ fully collapsed. The handlebar flexes back, and then you reach underneath the back of the seat to push a button and pull the red lever to collapse the seat. You press the buttons on both sides near the joints at the bottom of the handlebar. We found the two-handed, two-step fold of the Yoyo+ to be the most complicated of the models we tested. The mesh peekaboo window is notably better than most: it spans nearly the width of the canopy, can be secured open for ventilation, and has magnetic closures, so you can take a peek at your kid noiselessly. It has a sun protection rating of UPF 50+, the highest possible, which means it shields the passenger from more than 98 percent of both UVA and UVB rays. The canopy includes an extendable sunshade and provides more coverage than those of the Yoyo+ or the Nano. The seat is well-cushioned, with an adjustable five-point harness with removable Velcro-secured shoulder pads that can be rethreaded at three different height levels, like those on most strollers that we tested. The Minu’s seat is 18 inches tall by 12½ inches wide, which is a half inch to 1 inch greater in both dimensions than the Yoyo+ and Nano’s seats, and its 50-pound weight limit (which corresponds to an average 7-year-old) is the highest as well-the Yoyo+ and Nano go up to 40 and 44 pounds, respectively, though a few other strollers we tested go up to 55 pounds. The Minu is the only travel stroller we tested that was rated the favorite by all who tested it. Plus, it has the ability to accommodate a child from birth to toddlerhood, with the highest weight capacity of our picks.

The Minu has the most spacious, accessible underseat storage and also twice the weight limit of the baskets on the other models we tested.

Its wheels are larger than those of our other picks, giving it the best handling when rolling over unpredictable terrain, and it feels the sturdiest of the models we looked at. The Minu has one of the easiest one-handed folds, collapsing down to the size of two school backpacks side by side, and can be carried with a padded shoulder strap or by the front crossbar.
#CONTOURS BITSY COMPACT FOLD STROLLER VS BABY ZEN YO YO UPGRADE#
The 14.8-pound Uppababy Minu, released in early 2018, packs nearly all of the features of the Uppababy Cruz, our full-size stroller upgrade pick, into a body that is 7 pounds lighter and 40 percent smaller, which makes it a great option for travel or for a streamlined everyday stroller. We also found that single handlebars are preferable to two separate handles (as many umbrella strollers have) because they make it easier to push one-handed. Almost none of the travel strollers we found come with adjustable handlebars, which may make them uncomfortable and inconvenient for shorter or taller people to use. Our experts told us that suspension and quality ball bearings also help a stroller feel effortless to push and turn. The best-performing travel models have wheels of about 4½ to 7 inches in diameter. Travel strollers generally have smaller wheels than those of full-size strollers, making them more challenging to push over bumpy sidewalks and carpeted areas.

Research from our previous stroller guides showed that wheel size, wheelbase (the dimensions between the wheels), overall stroller dimensions, and handlebar height all contribute to how well a model performs. Easy to push and maneuver: Many parents I spoke to said that their biggest mistake in purchasing a second, more lightweight stroller was not prioritizing maneuverability and ease of pushing, which made wheeling their kids around less pleasant for everyone involved.
