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Bought a bookshelf - pieces missing
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26/02/2015 20:00:50
 
 
À
26/02/2015 08:11:23
Information générale
Forum:
Home Improvement
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
01615283
Message ID:
01615905
Vues:
32
>>>>>>Good point Sherlock. I must have extended the ladder as well (it was a while ago). It was all good except when he broke his arm.
>>>>>
>>>>>I assume that happened when he fell off the bed ?
>>>>>
>>>>>>Then it was mattress on the floor time.
>>>>
>>>>Those ikea beds have a nice barriers around them to prevent that sort of thing.
>>>
>>>I'm just wondering why you guys keep mentioning Ikea as if nobody else delivers furniture in pieces. Practically everything we bought since 1979 except, perhaps, some couches where the crew came and assembled them on the spot (read as: screwed the legs on), came in pieces and required assembly. That first set in 1979 and the kitchen we got in 2010 came with the guy who'd put it together, but pretty much everything else we did ourselves. What's the big deal?
>>
>>I still think Ikea are in a class of their own when it comes to complex assembly. Those Swedes must like a good challenge.
>
>I think the difference is that when assembled correctly, Ikea pieces are of much higher quality than other put-it-together-yourself stuff. That requires a more complex assembly process. My experience, though, is that the directions are mostly pretty clear.
>
>Tamar

We had a couple of pieces from Ikea many years ago and loved them.
My late wife, however, was captivated by their Swedish meatballs.
The Ikea on Long Island was one of her favorite lunch spots.
Anyone who does not go overboard- deserves to.
Malcolm Forbes, Sr.
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