This isn't the worst piece of furniture that I've assembled, but it's far from the best.
The pieces are wrapped in foam sheets that have the consistence of wet toilet paper, which will cast bits of static charged foam all over whatever room you assemble this in. You will also want to clean each piece as you assemble, or you'll wind up with a dusty mess of a cabinet.
Speaking of cleaning the pieces, each piece is labeled with a sticker, which is nice. Unfortunately, these stickers aren't the easy-to-remove variety, so in addition to your tools, grab your Goo Gone.
There were several construction corners cut, like the use of black vinyl stickers to cover the metal heads of screws that will be visible after assembly. This is pretty chintzy normally, but doubly so in this case, as the piece isn't actually black.
The instructions are bad, but usable. There is no chart showing the sizes of the various screws. The screws are numbered, but several of the parts bags include multiple parts, so the numbering isn't terribly useful. Further, the hardware is located in a box that is labeled legs on multiple sides. I spent several minutes searching the staticky, foamy box looking for the hardware kit, before finding it in the perplexingly labeled box.
The cabinet includes a mechanism for anchoring it to a wall, which is actually quite cleverly executed.
The cabinet uses dowel pins in a poorly conceived attempt to stop the drawers from coning entirely out of the unit when drawn too far. It works, but it's a kludge, and I'm certain that I'll find the dowel pins rolling around in the drawers at some later date, and will have forgotten why they're there.
I bought this cabinet to house my Internet router, which sits in my guest bedroom, so that the blinking lights won't disturb my guests. Happily, it works quite well for this purpose.
I wouldn't use this as a high traffic piece of furniture, not would I store anything of any size/weight in the drawers, but if you need a little cabinet to sit a lamp on, or someplace to stick things that you don't use very often, this works well enough.
And it's cheap.
It's cheap furniture, for sure.
This isn't the worst piece of furniture that I've assembled, but it's far from the best. The pieces are wrapped in foam sheets that have the consistence of wet toilet paper, which will cast bits of static charged foam all over whatever room you assemble this in. You will also want to clean each piece as you assemble, or you'll wind up with a dusty mess of a cabinet. Speaking of cleaning the pieces, each piece is labeled with a sticker, which is nice. Unfortunately, these stickers aren't the easy-to-remove variety, so in addition to your tools, grab your Goo Gone. There were several construction corners cut, like the use of black vinyl stickers to cover the metal heads of screws that will be visible after assembly. This is pretty chintzy normally, but doubly so in this case, as the piece isn't actually black. The instructions are bad, but usable. There is no chart showing the sizes of the various screws. The screws are numbered, but several of the parts bags include multiple parts, so the numbering isn't terribly useful. Further, the hardware is located in a box that is labeled legs on multiple sides. I spent several minutes searching the staticky, foamy box looking for the hardware kit, before finding it in the perplexingly labeled box. The cabinet includes a mechanism for anchoring it to a wall, which is actually quite cleverly executed. The cabinet uses dowel pins in a poorly conceived attempt to stop the drawers from coning entirely out of the unit when drawn too far. It works, but it's a kludge, and I'm certain that I'll find the dowel pins rolling around in the drawers at some later date, and will have forgotten why they're there. I bought this cabinet to house my Internet router, which sits in my guest bedroom, so that the blinking lights won't disturb my guests. Happily, it works quite well for this purpose. I wouldn't use this as a high traffic piece of furniture, not would I store anything of any size/weight in the drawers, but if you need a little cabinet to sit a lamp on, or someplace to stick things that you don't use very often, this works well enough. And it's cheap.