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

Magula 9-Gallon Portable Gravity-Fed Eye Wash Station Review (2026)

Is the Magula 9-Gallon Portable Gravity-Fed Eye Wash Station the right unit for remote and temporary work areas?

Short answer: Yes โ€” it is the largest-reservoir self-contained unit in this lineup, built for exactly the remote and temporary sites its listing names. The Magula is a wall-mounted, gravity-fed 9-gallon station at $125.55: no plumbing, no power, one more gallon of reserve than the near-identically priced Frifreego 8-Gallon Portable Eye Wash Station. Bottle stations like the MAASTERS BPA-Free Portable Eye Wash Station remain a supplemental tier, not an alternative to this class.

Temporary sites are where eyewash programs quietly fail: the plumbed fixture is back at the shop, the bottle station on the gang box is running on hope, and the corrosive hazard moved with the crew. Gravity-fed tanks exist to close that gap, and the Magula's 9-gallon reservoir is the deepest reserve in our eyewash stations collection. This review covers where the extra capacity matters, how the unit trades against the Frifreego, and the buyer's obligations a self-contained tank carries. As with every eyewash review we publish, all specification depth โ€” flow, duration, tepid range, placement, weekly checks โ€” lives in our What Is ANSI Z358.1? Emergency Eyewash Station Requirements explainer; verify any unit against it before it enters your compliance file.

As an Amazon Associate, WC Safety earns from qualifying purchases. Prices and availability are accurate as of the date shown and are subject to change. Full affiliate disclosure.

Editorial verdict: 4.4 / 5. The Magula 9-Gallon Portable Gravity-Fed Eye Wash Station is the capacity pick of the self-contained tier: the biggest reservoir on the site, gravity reliability, and a wall-mount format aimed squarely at remote areas and temporary sites, for a dollar more than the 8-gallon alternative. The buyer still owns certification verification and tank upkeep โ€” same as every unit in this class.

VIEW ON WC SAFETY โ†’ CHECK PRICE ON AMAZON โ†’

Pros

  • 9-gallon reservoir โ€” the deepest reserve in this lineup, sized for sustained irrigation
  • Gravity-fed and fully self-contained โ€” no plumbing or power anywhere near the hazard required
  • Purpose-positioned for remote and temporary sites per the listing โ€” the exact gap plumbed fixtures leave
  • Wall-mount format keeps it staged, visible, and off the floor

Cons

  • Heaviest filled weight in the lineup โ€” 9 gallons of water demands a serious mount
  • Certification verification is on the buyer โ€” listing language is not a compliance file
  • Tank maintenance is non-optional โ€” fluid changes, inspection, documentation
  • Newer brand โ€” less procurement track record than the established bottle-station names

Who the Magula 9-gallon is for

  • Remote work areas and temporary sites where corrosive or splash hazards operate far from plumbing
  • Facilities that want maximum self-contained reserve per station and per dollar
  • Contractors staging eyewash alongside the rest of the jobsite program in the construction site PPE hub
  • Buyers who reached the gravity-fed tier through our best portable eyewash stations guide and want the capacity option

What the Magula 9-gallon does well

Reserve depth is the point of this class

Sustained irrigation consumes water fast, and reserve is the difference between a flush that finishes and one that sputters out early. Nine gallons is the largest tank on the site โ€” a meaningful margin over 8-gallon units when the mission is delivering station-class flushing with zero external supply. If you are buying self-contained capacity at all, more of it at the same price is a clean win.

Built for the sites that plumbed fixtures abandon

The listing positions this unit for remote work areas and temporary sites, and that is precisely where it earns its keep: the far corner of the yard, the seasonal line, the containment area that exists for one contract. A gravity tank re-hangs wherever the hazard goes next โ€” flexibility no fixture and no pipe run can offer, at a fraction of a plumbing change order.

Gravity reliability, glance-level auditing

No pump to fail, no pressure to lose, no valve chain to freeze into inaction. A filled tank with clear nozzles either works or visibly does not, which makes monthly checks fast and honest. For low-supervision remote areas, that auditability is worth as much as the capacity.

It anchors a proper two-tier response

Paired with a point-of-hazard bottle unit โ€” the MAASTERS portable eye wash station or the budget CGOLDENWALL portable eye wash kit โ€” the Magula gives a remote area the same first-seconds-plus-sustained-flush structure a plumbed facility gets, assembled from two brackets and a wall.

Where the Magula 9-gallon falls short

Weight discipline comes first

Nine gallons of water is roughly 75 pounds before hardware. That is a structural mounting job โ€” studs or masonry, rated fasteners, mount checks folded into every inspection. Skipping that step converts a safety station into a falling-object hazard, and it is the first thing we would audit on any installed unit.

The compliance file is your work, not the listing's

The Magula's listing does not spell out its service class the way the Frifreego's names the 15-minute flush, and either way a listing is a starting point: flow behavior, spray pattern, tepid management, and placement all get verified against the standard by the buyer. The checklist logic lives in the ANSI Z358.1 eyewash requirements explainer โ€” run it before this or any tank goes into your documentation as primary equipment.

A newer name in a trust-driven category

Magula does not carry the procurement familiarity of the established first-aid brands, and eyewash is a category where paperwork trails matter. That is priced into our rating and mitigated the usual way: your own verification, your own inspection log.

How the Magula 9-gallon compares on WC Safety

Product Format Role Typical price
Magula 9-Gallon Eye Wash Station Gravity-fed 9-gallon tank Self-contained, max capacity $125.55 Check price
Frifreego 8-Gallon Eye Wash Station Gravity-fed 8-gallon tank Self-contained, 15-min service named $124.56 Check price
MAASTERS Portable Eye Wash Station Dual-bottle wall station + mirror Supplemental tier $29.95 Check price
PhysiciansCare Wall-Mount Eyewash Station Double-bottle wall station Supplemental tier $45.99 Check price
PhysiciansCare Sterile Eye Wash Solution Sterile solution bottle Refill / kit bottle $11.85 Check price

Magula 9-gallon vs Frifreego 8-gallon: capacity vs paperwork

Spec Magula 9-Gallon Frifreego 8-Gallon
Gravity-fed, self-contained, wall-mounted โœ“ โœ“
Reservoir capacity 9 gallons 8 gallons
15-minute-flush service named in listing โ€” โœ“
Filled weight (water alone, approx.) ~75 lb ~66 lb
Typical price $125.55 $124.56
  • Buy the Magula for maximum reserve at the tier's standard price โ€” the capacity pick for remote and temporary areas.
  • Buy the Frifreego if listing-stated 15-minute service language matters to your documentation โ€” the Frifreego 8-Gallon review makes that case.
  • Either way, verify the unit yourself against the checklist in the ANSI Z358.1 explainer before it enters the compliance file.

Shop gravity-fed stations on Amazon โ†’ Magula 9-Gallon Frifreego 8-Gallon

What to stage around the tank

Run the standard two-tier layout: a bottle station at the immediate splash point โ€” the mirror-equipped MAASTERS or the PhysiciansCare double-bottle unit reviewed in our PhysiciansCare Wall-Mount Eyewash Station review โ€” with the Magula as the sustained-flush anchor nearby. Keep sealed solution such as the bottle covered in the PhysiciansCare Eye Wash Solution review in the area's first aid cabinet, and treat sealed goggles from the safety glasses collection as the prevention layer the whole setup backstops.

Top station companions on Amazon โ†’ MAASTERS Bottle Station PhysiciansCare Solution

Where a 9-gallon tank fits in a compliance program

OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151(c) requires suitable flushing facilities wherever eyes may be exposed to injurious corrosive materials, and ANSI/ISEA Z358.1 defines the equipment classes that satisfy it โ€” all of the specification depth is in our ANSI Z358.1 eyewash station requirements explainer, deliberately not repeated here. Gravity-fed tanks are the accepted self-contained route where plumbing is absent; the buyer's obligations are verification, placement, and maintenance. Build the wider hazard-to-kit mapping with the which first aid kit do you need pillar guide and the OSHA first aid kit requirements reference.

Total cost of ownership

Hardware is $125.55; the recurring line is fluid changes on the manufacturer's schedule (additive or fresh fill), inspection labor, and mount checks โ€” an hour or two of documented time per quarter. For temporary sites, add the relocation cost of draining, moving, re-mounting, and refilling between phases. Spread across the seasons a remote area operates, it remains the cheapest station-class coverage available to an unplumbed corner of the first aid kits program.

Final verdict: 4.4 / 5

The Magula 9-Gallon Portable Gravity-Fed Eye Wash Station is the capacity leader of the self-contained tier and the natural pick for remote and temporary sites. Buy it when reserve depth and relocatability decide, and verify certification for your own file. Buy the Frifreego 8-gallon alternative if its listing-stated 15-minute service language suits your documentation better. Add the MAASTERS bottle station (supplemental tier) at the exact splash point either way.

VIEW ON WC SAFETY โ†’ CHECK PRICE ON AMAZON โ†’

Magula 9-Gallon Eye Wash Station FAQ

Is the Magula 9-gallon station ANSI Z358.1 compliant?

Gravity-fed tanks are the standard self-contained route to station-class service, but compliance is established per unit by the buyer โ€” flow, duration, pattern, tepid range, and placement all get checked against the standard. Run the verification checklist in the ANSI Z358.1 explainer before certifying it.

Why choose a 9-gallon tank over an 8-gallon?

Reserve. Sustained irrigation consumes water quickly, and the extra gallon is additional margin at essentially the same price โ€” the Magula and the Frifreego 8-gallon differ by a dollar. The Frifreego counters with listing-stated 15-minute service language.

Is a gravity-fed tank better than a bottle eyewash station?

Different tiers, not better or worse: tanks deliver sustained hands-free flushing; bottles like the MAASTERS station deliver immediate seconds-long rinse at the splash point. Corrosive-hazard areas run both, with the tank as the anchor.

What does the Magula need for mounting?

Structure โ€” studs or masonry with rated fasteners โ€” because a filled 9-gallon unit carries roughly 75 pounds of water before hardware. Check the mount at every inspection; a failed bracket is a worse outcome than the incident it was staged for.

How do I maintain the tank water?

Per the manufacturer's directions: preservative additive on a documented change schedule, or regular fresh fills. Log every change and inspection the same way you log your first aid cabinets โ€” an out-of-date tank is a false promise on a wall.

Can the Magula be relocated between jobsites?

Yes โ€” that is the class's core advantage. Drain, move, re-mount into structure, refill, and re-log. Temporary and phased sites covered in the construction site PPE guide are its natural habitat.

Does it work in freezing environments?

Standing water freezes; an unheated remote area in winter needs a freeze-protection plan โ€” relocation indoors, heated enclosure, or a seasonal swap to alternatives. A frozen station is a non-functional station regardless of capacity.

What triggers needing this class of equipment?

OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151(c) requires suitable flushing facilities where eyes may be exposed to injurious corrosive materials, and unplumbed areas satisfy that with self-contained units. The threshold logic is in the OSHA first aid requirements reference.

How often should a self-contained tank be inspected?

Monthly visual checks with quarterly documented inspections is a defensible floor, plus the fluid-change schedule from the manufacturer. Weekly activation rules attach to plumbed units; the explainer covers which cadence applies to which class.

Magula vs PhysiciansCare wall station โ€” is that a fair comparison?

No โ€” they are different tiers. The PhysiciansCare wall station is a supplemental double-bottle unit; the Magula is self-contained station-class equipment. The honest comparison set is the Frifreego, reviewed in the Frifreego 8-gallon review.

What happens after flushing with the tank?

Medical evaluation, immediately, for any corrosive or injurious exposure โ€” flushing is first aid, not treatment. Serious exposures are a 911 call, and the chemical's SDS directs follow-up care.

Should the tank hold plain water or solution?

Whatever the manufacturer's directions specify โ€” typically potable water with a preservative additive changed on schedule. Sealed sterile bottles like the PhysiciansCare eye wash solution remain the right format for kit-level and follow-up irrigation.

Is one 9-gallon tank enough for a large facility?

One tank covers one hazard area within the standard's reach rules. Multiple corrosive zones mean multiple stations โ€” map hazards first with the which first aid kit do you need guide, then position equipment per the explainer.

Does eyewash equipment replace goggles?

Never โ€” flushing is the response layer under a prevention program. Sealed splash goggles from the safety glasses collection are the first control; the tank exists for the day prevention fails.

What rating did the Magula 9-gallon earn and why?

4.4 / 5. Largest reservoir in the lineup, gravity reliability, and a format purpose-built for the remote and temporary sites its listing names โ€” at the tier's standard price. It concedes points for buyer-side certification work and the newer brand name; the full ranking context is in the best portable eyewash stations guide.

Why trust this Magula 9-gallon review? WC Safety operates as an independent industrial PPE and first-aid retailer โ€” we stock the Magula station alongside the competing Frifreego tank and the supplemental bottle tier for safety managers and facility teams. This review is authored by our editorial desk, not by Magula or paid third-party reviewers. Capability claims are limited to the manufacturer's listing, framed against the equipment-tier structure of ANSI/ISEA Z358.1 and OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151. Disclosed: WC Safety stocks this station and earns Amazon affiliate commissions on outbound clicks; neither factor influences the rating.
By Steven Eaton, WC Safety Editorial โ€” Industrial first-aid and PPE desk ยท specialization: emergency eyewash programs, ANSI Z358.1 equipment tiers, and workplace first-aid compliance.
Last reviewed: ยท Sources reviewed: OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151(c), ANSI/ISEA Z358.1-2014, Magula product listing data, FDA OTC labeling for sterile eyewash solutions, OSHA 29 CFR 1926.50.
Editorial standard: Zero sponsored listings. No manufacturer input. No paid placement on this page. Capacity statements sourced from the manufacturer's listing โ€” no invented flow rates or certification claims.
How this eyewash station review was researched. We compared the Magula 9-gallon against every eyewash product stocked on WC Safety on format, tier, capacity, and price, and mapped each against OSHA 29 CFR 1910.151 and the ANSI/ISEA Z358.1 framework detailed in our ANSI Z358.1 explainer. No first-person flow testing is claimed or performed. Reviewed quarterly and on any change to OSHA or ANSI/ISEA guidance.
Disclosure. WC Safety participates in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program and earns from qualifying purchases made through links on this page (tag wcsafety04-20). We also stock this product in our own store. The 4.4/5 rating reflects reservoir capacity, gravity reliability, remote-site fit, and the honest verification and maintenance burden every self-contained unit carries โ€” no manufacturer sponsored, reviewed, or influenced this content. This article is not medical, legal, or regulatory advice: eyewash equipment selection and certification for corrosive-chemical workplaces should be made with your safety officer against ANSI/ISEA Z358.1, and chemical eye exposures require immediate flushing and emergency medical care.
Previous article Medique 712MTM 3-Shelf First Aid Cabinet with Pockets Review (2026)
Next article LSIKA-Z CPR Face Shield Keychain, 100-Pack Review (2026)

Leave a comment

* Required fields