I haven't gotten much from Ikea, but I've been happy with the stuff I got. It's a good way for young people to get acceptable furniture, that goes with an unstable life. eg it'll take some abuse moving around, and if it gets a little damaged, it's no big deal.
Just about everything I've ever gotten from Ikea I've regretted..... Well, as far as furniture, that is.
Everything always begins to fall apart within 1-2 years.... I just recall furniture that my parents have had for 20+ years that still look damn nice without chips and pieces falling off. I'm thinking when I do buy more furniture it will be Amish... expensive, but damn worth it since it lasts.
I will vouch that the desk I had (Galant I think?) was definitely worth it. But that's because it was simply a slab of ~1.5" PURE wood ontop of the desk. Very simple, but very sturdy. Held up very well until I built my own.
The easy to assemble bit is a lie. It kinda sucks when parts aren't to spec and don't fit or worse, are missing. I stopped buying from them years ago. Maybe they've improved but I don't think so given what I've heard from some people. I won't buy from them just on principle.
I hear you. There's a pretty decent chain I've used - Ashley's - but I don't know if they're local or national.Only bitch that didn't want to be assembled was a lamp. The shade was a stupid piece of plastic that you had to jam between two steel frames. Pissed me off so much I was ready to return it. I also have a mechanical kitchen timer that likes to randomly stop in the middle of a countdown.
Everything else made of wood or metal, I've not had a problem. I'm talking over a dozen pieces by now.
But honestly, I don't know where else to buy furniture. The stuff at Sears I've seen is insanely expensive. We have a few craptastic furniture showroom chains, delivery only, IIRC. There's a nearby chain that is post-modern steel/glass. Staples/Wal-Mart stuff I've bought had terrible instructions.
Only bitch that didn't want to be assembled was a lamp. The shade was a stupid piece of plastic that you had to jam between two steel frames. Pissed me off so much I was ready to return it.
We were only able to drop a grand on the family fireworks display. It just *barely* beat the neighbors this year. I am going to have to get a professional license and end this nonsense before the neighbor thinks he's a contender.
$1000+ for fireworks? seriously? I guess I can never understand that... I mean... any fireworks you buy will pale in comparison to professional public shows. I get it, you can set them off, but is it really that amazing to light a fuse?
I loathe particleboard in furniture, even if all it has to do is hold its own weight.
My mole has gotten wiser and is now tunneling underneath my set traps so I had to go out and reset them to his new tunnel levels. I was out there in the heat and humidity sifting dirt to convince Mr. Mole that he was in virgin territory around the traps. I hope he hits a trigger just right this time so I can end this chapter in my summer activities.
A single AAA NiMH battery is ~1.25v said:Series only adds voltage, not current. 6 of them would give you 7.5 with 750 mAh. If you put 6 in parallel, you would get 1.25V at 4500 mAh. To get 7.5 at 4500, you would need 36 total in a series-parallel configuration. It may be easier to visualize if you compare watt/hours. That AAA cell has .9375 watt hours. 6 of them in series have 5.625. 6 of them in parallel have the same 5.625 watt hours. 7.5 Volts at 4500 mAh is 33.75 watt hours.