Great Bed...Until You Get to the Wooden Support Beams...(No cross hatching) Trash Beams
I'll update with additional photos. The support beams that run horizontally under the twin beds are made out of the cheapest wood material. A beam on the bottom bed already broke. Having 2 or 3 support beams that run vertically to cross-hatch and strengthen the horizontal beams is necessary, especially with the trash wood they're using. I simply cannot understand how a designer cannot understand something so basic.
So you get on the bed, and as you're climbing on, you're putting your knees and weight predominately on a single beam. (No weight distribution) in certain areas repeated over and over will make those areas weak...If you're using trash wood OR don't have support beams.
My son, who weights 140 pound, was on the top bunk and I'm on the bottom, laying with my youngest...(Knowing full well that the bottom beam already broke.) I'm looking up and the beams are bowing (is that spelled correctly) they're bowing down. And I'm thinking, wow, if that bottom beam broke, who's to say that all these won't?
So I slightly pull on some of these beams and you can tell the wood is close to going.
You take away the trash wood OR at the least, if you're going to use trash wood, you MUST have the horizontal supports under the mattress AS WELL as the vertical. To be completely honest, this is a HUGE SAFETY concern. I can record a video and upload it.
That's where I'm at here.
It's and their support beams are trash and a huge liability.
I hope the company rep sees this because this could cause some serious injury and at the very least, just isn't comforting. Fix it or offer a solution to fix it.
Great Bed...Until You Get to the Wooden Support Beams...(No cross hatching) Trash Beams
I'll update with additional photos. The support beams that run horizontally under the twin beds are made out of the cheapest wood material. A beam on the bottom bed already broke. Having 2 or 3 support beams that run vertically to cross-hatch and strengthen the horizontal beams is necessary, especially with the trash wood they're using. I simply cannot understand how a designer cannot understand something so basic. So you get on the bed, and as you're climbing on, you're putting your knees and weight predominately on a single beam. (No weight distribution) in certain areas repeated over and over will make those areas weak...If you're using trash wood OR don't have support beams. My son, who weights 140 pound, was on the top bunk and I'm on the bottom, laying with my youngest...(Knowing full well that the bottom beam already broke.) I'm looking up and the beams are bowing (is that spelled correctly) they're bowing down. And I'm thinking, wow, if that bottom beam broke, who's to say that all these won't? So I slightly pull on some of these beams and you can tell the wood is close to going. You take away the trash wood OR at the least, if you're going to use trash wood, you MUST have the horizontal supports under the mattress AS WELL as the vertical. To be completely honest, this is a HUGE SAFETY concern. I can record a video and upload it. That's where I'm at here. It's and their support beams are trash and a huge liability. I hope the company rep sees this because this could cause some serious injury and at the very least, just isn't comforting. Fix it or offer a solution to fix it.