I bought a 9X15 Trampoline from a different online source which may or may not rhyme with sea-bay, and it arrived in three heavy boxes. The instructions were in box 3. The instructions are easy to follow, and written by someone with a bit of a sense of humor, however there are two issues:
1. The step that reminds the builder to line up the door of the safety net with the center of the long side does not mention the caveat that if it is already put together and not aligned with the center, it may be for a reason, i.e. the door and the posts are aligned differently from the diagram. The door to our new trampoline was three rings to the right of the center. I repositioned every single slot to center the door, and then put on every single spring, and did not discover the error until erecting the safely net support posts.
2. The spring cover gets tied to the perimeter pole, and the trampoline rings. The ties supplied are elastic. The instructions say tie in a bow, but do not specify how tightly to cinch them. Me being the smart guy that I am tied them all tight. Me being the 200+ lb. guy that I am, heard four distinct pops the first time I jumped on the trampoline. Four of the ties broke right off, leaving four of my beautiful bows firmly attached to the triangular rings. Tie them with some play.
Lots of fun, but two alibis...
I bought a 9X15 Trampoline from a different online source which may or may not rhyme with sea-bay, and it arrived in three heavy boxes. The instructions were in box 3. The instructions are easy to follow, and written by someone with a bit of a sense of humor, however there are two issues: 1. The step that reminds the builder to line up the door of the safety net with the center of the long side does not mention the caveat that if it is already put together and not aligned with the center, it may be for a reason, i.e. the door and the posts are aligned differently from the diagram. The door to our new trampoline was three rings to the right of the center. I repositioned every single slot to center the door, and then put on every single spring, and did not discover the error until erecting the safely net support posts. 2. The spring cover gets tied to the perimeter pole, and the trampoline rings. The ties supplied are elastic. The instructions say tie in a bow, but do not specify how tightly to cinch them. Me being the smart guy that I am tied them all tight. Me being the 200+ lb. guy that I am, heard four distinct pops the first time I jumped on the trampoline. Four of the ties broke right off, leaving four of my beautiful bows firmly attached to the triangular rings. Tie them with some play.