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Industrial Safety Equipment & PPE โ€” ANSI/OSHA Compliant
Industrial Safety Equipment & PPE โ€” ANSI/OSHA Compliant

CGOLDENWALL Portable Emergency Eye Wash Station Kit Review (2026)

Is the CGOLDENWALL Portable Emergency Eye Wash Station Kit the right budget eyewash for your lab or shop?

Short answer: Yes โ€” if you need to put supplemental eye-flushing capability on a wall for the least money in our lineup. The CGOLDENWALL Portable Emergency Eye Wash Station Kit (model CNA 780) is the budget entry in our eyewash stations collection: a wall-mounted kit for labs and shops that lack plumbed eyewash access. It is a supplemental unit โ€” where ANSI Z358.1 requires a 15-minute primary flush, step up to a self-contained tank like the Frifreego 8-gallon; and if brand pedigree and refill logistics matter more than price, the PhysiciansCare wall station is the safer default.

Not every bench justifies a three-figure eyewash budget. The honest case for the CGOLDENWALL kit is coverage density: at around $27 per station, a facility can mount supplemental eyewash at every genuine hazard point instead of rationing one premium station per floor. This review covers what you get for that money, what documentation and refill trade-offs come with a value import brand, and where the CNA 780 lands against the other five units in our first aid lineup.

Editorial verdict: 4.1 / 5. The CGOLDENWALL CNA 780 is the price-per-hazard-point play โ€” a functional wall-mounted eye wash kit at roughly half the cost of the brand-name alternative. It gives up refill-chain convenience and documentation depth to get there, which is exactly the trade a budget buyer should understand before standardizing on it.

As an Amazon Associate, WC Safety earns from qualifying purchases. Prices and availability are subject to change. Full affiliate disclosure.

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Pros

  • Lowest station price in our lineup โ€” supplemental coverage at ~$27 per hazard point
  • Wall-mounted kit format โ€” visible, signed eyewash instead of a bottle in a drawer
  • Built for unplumbed spaces โ€” labs, shops, and back rooms without fixture access
  • Model-numbered product (CNA 780) โ€” easier to spec and reorder than generic kits
  • No plumbing or maintenance infrastructure โ€” mount and stock

Cons

  • Supplemental class only โ€” no bottle kit satisfies an ANSI Z358.1 primary requirement
  • Thinner documentation trail โ€” value import brand vs established first aid names
  • Refill sourcing is on you โ€” no branded refill ecosystem like PhysiciansCare's
  • Capacity not stated in the listing โ€” verify bottle volumes on receipt

Who the CGOLDENWALL Portable Eye Wash Station Kit is for

  • Labs, workshops, and cleaning stations without plumbed eyewash access that need visible supplemental coverage
  • Facilities buying multiple stations at once, where the ~$20 saving per point multiplies
  • Budget-conscious programs that already have primary coverage โ€” like the Magula 9-gallon gravity-fed station โ€” and want cheap secondary points
  • Shops rounding out a wall that already carries a kit from the workplace first aid kits collection
  • Anyone pairing bench-level eye risk with eyewear from the safety glasses collection and wanting a flush option beside it

What the CGOLDENWALL CNA 780 does well

The price makes real coverage density possible

The most common eyewash failure isn't equipment quality โ€” it's absence. A single premium station at one end of the building doesn't help the worker splashed at the other end. At roughly $27, the CNA 780 changes the math: three CGOLDENWALL stations cost less than two PhysiciansCare stations, and coverage at the actual point of hazard is what makes the first seconds of a flush possible.

Wall-kit format beats loose bottles

Like the rest of the bottle-station tier, the CGOLDENWALL's real feature is findability: a mounted, labeled kit that a worker with one eye clamped shut can locate by memory. It converts sterile flushing from "somewhere in the cabinet" to a fixed station that shows up on your monthly inspection walk, the same audit logic that applies to first aid cabinets.

Fits the unplumbed-space niche

The kit is aimed at exactly the rooms that create eyewash gaps โ€” rented labs, back-of-house prep areas, detached workshops โ€” where running a plumbed fixture is not going to happen. In those rooms, a supplemental wall kit plus a documented path to primary equipment is a defensible, honest setup, and this is the cheapest way to build it. See our ANSI Z358.1 explainer for when supplemental-only coverage is and isn't enough.

A model number you can actually spec

Small thing, but real: the CNA 780 model designation means procurement can reorder the same station next quarter instead of gambling on a drifting generic listing. For multi-site standardization on a budget, that repeatability matters.

Where the CGOLDENWALL CNA 780 falls short

It cannot answer a primary-eyewash requirement

Same ceiling as every bottle station, worth stating plainly: OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151(c) requires suitable quick-drenching facilities where corrosives are in use, and ANSI Z358.1 defines that around sustained 15-minute flushing. A wall kit supports the response; it doesn't satisfy the requirement. Where you need the primary tier without plumbing, the Frifreego 8-gallon and Magula 9-gallon self-contained stations are the in-lineup answers โ€” our OSHA first aid requirements reference maps the regulatory chain.

Documentation and brand depth are thin

PhysiciansCare comes with decades of first aid catalog presence and label conventions auditors recognize on sight. CGOLDENWALL is a value import brand: functional, but with a thinner paper trail. If your facility faces frequent third-party audits or customer safety reviews, the premium station's recognizability may be worth the extra $20 per point.

You own the refill problem

There's no branded CGOLDENWALL refill ecosystem to subscribe to. Restocking means sourcing compatible sterile eye wash bottles โ€” such as the PhysiciansCare Sterile Eye Wash Solution โ€” and verifying fit with the kit's brackets yourself. Do that verification once at purchase, not during an emergency restock.

How it compares: the WC Safety eyewash lineup

Product Class Typical price Best for
CGOLDENWALL CNA 780 Supplemental wall station ~$27 Budget lab/shop mounting
PhysiciansCare Eye Wash Solution Personal bottle / refill ~$12 Kit stocking, station refills
PhysiciansCare Wall-Mount Station Supplemental wall station, 32 oz ~$46 Brand-name point-of-hazard coverage
MAASTERS BPA-Free Station Supplemental wall station ~$30 Dual bottles with aiming mirror
Frifreego 8-Gallon Station Self-contained gravity-fed ~$125 Remote areas without plumbing
Magula 9-Gallon Station Self-contained gravity-fed ~$126 Temporary and remote sites

Tier-by-tier rankings live in the best portable eyewash stations guide.

Budget vs brand: CGOLDENWALL vs PhysiciansCare vs MAASTERS

Shop bottle stations on Amazon โ†’ CGOLDENWALL CNA 780 PhysiciansCare Station MAASTERS Station

What to pair with it

Stock the kit with sterile bottles like the PhysiciansCare eye wash solution (verify bracket fit), put prevention on faces via the safety glasses collection, and make sure the same wall carries a stocked kit from the workplace first aid kits collection with wound supplies from the bandages and wound care collection. The first aid kit pillar guide lays out the whole program.

Top pairings on Amazon โ†’ PhysiciansCare Refill Bottles Magula 9-Gallon

Total cost of ownership

Acquisition is the headline saving; ownership is a wash. Every bottle station carries the same recurring line โ€” in-date sterile bottles, replaced on expiration or after any use โ€” so the CNA 780's lifetime advantage is the up-front $20 per point, minus whatever your time is worth verifying third-party refill fit once. Across ten hazard points that's roughly $200 saved at install, which buys a meaningful chunk of a primary-tier gravity station for the one location that actually needs it. That reallocation โ€” cheap supplemental everywhere, real primary where required โ€” is the budget program done right.

Final verdict: 4.1 / 5

The CGOLDENWALL CNA 780 earns its place as the volume buy of the bottle-station tier: functional, mountable, spec-able, and cheap enough to put eyewash where the hazards actually are. It gives up brand depth and refill convenience to hit the price, and it shares the tier's hard ceiling โ€” supplemental only. Buy it in multiples for coverage density; buy the PhysiciansCare station where recognizability matters, and a gravity-fed unit where the standard demands more.

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CGOLDENWALL Portable Emergency Eye Wash Station Kit โ€” FAQ

Is the CGOLDENWALL portable eye wash station ANSI Z358.1 compliant?

It sits in the personal/supplemental class โ€” useful for immediate flushing, but no wall-mounted bottle kit satisfies ANSI Z358.1's primary eyewash requirements, which are built around a sustained 15-minute flush. Our ANSI Z358.1 explainer covers which tier your hazard requires.

What is the CGOLDENWALL CNA 780 designed for?

It's a wall-mounted portable eye wash kit for labs, shops, and work areas without plumbed eyewash access โ€” the listing's own positioning. Mounted at the hazard point, it turns loose eye wash bottles into a visible, findable station for the first seconds of a flush.

CGOLDENWALL vs PhysiciansCare wall station โ€” which should I buy?

Buy the CGOLDENWALL for price and coverage density; buy the PhysiciansCare station for its stated 32-ounce sterile capacity, brand recognizability, and painless refill chain. At ~$27 vs ~$46, the right answer usually depends on how many points you're covering โ€” the PhysiciansCare review argues the premium case.

Can the CGOLDENWALL kit replace a plumbed eyewash fixture?

No. Where OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151(c) requires quick-drenching facilities for corrosive exposure, the answer is plumbed or self-contained primary equipment โ€” like the Frifreego 8-gallon station โ€” with bottle kits as supplements. The OSHA first aid requirements reference walks through the rule.

What refill bottles work with the CGOLDENWALL station?

CGOLDENWALL has no branded refill ecosystem, so source compatible sterile eye wash bottles โ€” the PhysiciansCare Sterile Eye Wash Solution is the standard candidate โ€” and verify fit against the kit's brackets when the station arrives, not during an emergency restock.

Where should the CGOLDENWALL station be mounted?

At the point of hazard, eye-height accessible, unobstructed, and signed. A worker flushing one eye navigates by memory, so mount along the natural path from bench to door and keep the approach clear โ€” the same placement discipline as first aid cabinets.

Is a budget eyewash station risky for compliance audits?

The station itself isn't the risk โ€” mispositioning it is. Auditors flag supplemental units standing in for missing primary equipment, whatever the brand. Document the station as supplemental coverage, keep bottles in date, and make sure primary equipment exists where your hazard assessment requires it.

How many CGOLDENWALL stations does a facility need?

One per hazard cluster beats one per building. The kit's price makes the right answer affordable: map where splashes, dusts, and cleaning chemicals actually occur, and mount a station within seconds' reach of each. Our first aid pillar guide covers program sizing.

Does the CGOLDENWALL kit expire?

The bracket doesn't; the sterile bottles in it do. Expiration-date management is the entire ongoing maintenance of a bottle station โ€” add it to the monthly inspection and replace bottles on date or after any use, no exceptions.

Can the CGOLDENWALL station handle chemical splash first response?

It can start the flush immediately, which is its job โ€” but chemical exposures need prolonged irrigation and medical follow-up. Flush, move to primary equipment, and check the SDS for substance-specific direction. Supplemental stations buy time; they don't finish the job.

CGOLDENWALL vs MAASTERS โ€” what's the difference at nearly the same price?

Three dollars separates them. The MAASTERS station adds BPA-free dual bottles and an aiming mirror; the CGOLDENWALL counters with its model-numbered spec-ability. If the mirror matters to your users, spend the $3 โ€” the MAASTERS review has the details.

Is the CGOLDENWALL station OSHA-approved?

OSHA doesn't approve or certify eyewash products. It requires suitable flushing facilities where hazards demand them; ANSI Z358.1 defines the equipment tiers. The CNA 780 is positioned for OSHA/ANSI first aid programs as a supplemental wall unit โ€” compliance turns on your overall coverage, not any single product.

What should sit next to the eyewash station on the wall?

A stocked first aid kit from the workplace first aid kits collection, wound supplies from the bandages and wound care collection, and clear signage. Consolidating the emergency wall shortens every response.

Do I still need safety glasses if I mount eyewash stations?

Yes โ€” the station is the response, eyewear is the prevention, and the cheapest eye injury is the one that never happens. Fit the crew from the safety glasses collection and let the station be the backstop, not the plan.

Where can I compare every eyewash option WC Safety stocks?

The best portable eyewash stations guide ranks the full lineup, and the Magula 9-gallon review covers the gravity-fed tier above this kit. Browse everything in the eyewash stations collection.

Why trust this CGOLDENWALL Portable Eye Wash Station review? WC Safety operates as an independent industrial PPE and first aid retailer โ€” we stock this kit alongside the brand-name and gravity-fed alternatives it competes with, and we sell to safety managers, procurement teams, and field supervisors. This review is authored by our editorial desk, not by CGOLDENWALL or paid third-party reviewers. Positioning is mapped against OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151 and ANSI/ISEA Z358.1 equipment-class definitions. Disclosed: WC Safety stocks this product and earns Amazon affiliate commissions on outbound clicks; neither factor influences the rating.
By Steven Eaton, WC Safety Editorial โ€” First aid and emergency equipment desk ยท specialization: OSHA/ANSI first aid program stocking, emergency eyewash tiers, and workplace kit compliance.
Last reviewed: ยท Sources reviewed: OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151, OSHA 29 CFR 1926.50, ANSI/ISEA Z358.1-2014, FDA OTC ophthalmic drug labeling requirements, CGOLDENWALL CNA 780 product listing documentation.
Editorial standard: Zero sponsored listings. No manufacturer input. No paid placement on this page. Positioning taken from the product listing โ€” no specifications invented.
How this eye wash station review was researched. We evaluated the CGOLDENWALL CNA 780 as a buyer's-guide analysis: the kit's listed format and positioning were mapped against OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151, ANSI/ISEA Z358.1 supplemental-vs-primary equipment classes, OSHA 1926.50, and FDA OTC labeling conventions, then compared on price, format, and refill logistics against the five other units in our eyewash lineup. No first-person product testing is claimed. Reviewed quarterly and on any change to OSHA or ANSI/ISEA guidance.
Disclosure. WC Safety participates in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program; outbound Amazon links on this page carry our affiliate tag and may earn us a commission at no cost to you. WC Safety also stocks this product. The 4.1/5 rating reflects editorial assessment of price-per-point value, format, refill logistics, and honest tier limits โ€” no sponsorship or manufacturer input was involved. This article is not medical, legal, or regulatory advice; consult your safety officer or a certified professional for site-specific eyewash requirements.
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