โMar-11-2019 10:49 AM
โOct-10-2019 08:09 AM
Goldneye1 wrote:
I finally got around to fixing the couch, all went well. I used a good quality pine, seemed a bit harder than the white pine. Thanks for pointing me in the right direction.
โOct-10-2019 06:39 AM
โMar-25-2019 09:20 AM
nayther wrote:Thanks for the info. I'll post back how it went, just might be a bit but I will get back.Goldneye1 wrote:fitznj wrote:This seems to be exa1xctly what is happening. The legs are not supporting the couch/bed so all the weight is on the bracket thats attached to the wall. What did you use to extend the bracket down to the floor? I'm afraid that the wood is split and I can not get a screw back in the same hole.
I had the same thing happen; Assuming the bed bracket has been screwed in to the
wall, then you may want to look at the load on the brackets; You may find that
when you sit on the couch there is a load on the bracket trying to pull the
screws out of the wall;
Hard to explain, but I extended the brackets down to the floor, so all the load
would be vertical and not horizontal; I used square tubing from Home Depot. I
also used larger/longer lag bolts (measure first so you don't go all the way
through) - so far it's held up.
Hope this helps
use a 1x6 piece of pine, paint it white and attach to the studs in new holes, wood will cover the old ones. Then attach the couch to the new header. Couch will be out 1" farther but that shouldn't pose a problem. If you then extend some vertical 1x1 material vertically down to the floor you can transfer some of that load vertically instead of relying only on the screws in the wall.
โMar-19-2019 01:38 PM
Goldneye1 wrote:fitznj wrote:This seems to be exa1xctly what is happening. The legs are not supporting the couch/bed so all the weight is on the bracket thats attached to the wall. What did you use to extend the bracket down to the floor? I'm afraid that the wood is split and I can not get a screw back in the same hole.
I had the same thing happen; Assuming the bed bracket has been screwed in to the
wall, then you may want to look at the load on the brackets; You may find that
when you sit on the couch there is a load on the bracket trying to pull the
screws out of the wall;
Hard to explain, but I extended the brackets down to the floor, so all the load
would be vertical and not horizontal; I used square tubing from Home Depot. I
also used larger/longer lag bolts (measure first so you don't go all the way
through) - so far it's held up.
Hope this helps
โMar-19-2019 09:11 AM
fitznj wrote:This seems to be exactly what is happening. The legs are not supporting the couch/bed so all the weight is on the bracket thats attached to the wall. What did you use to extend the bracket down to the floor? I'm afraid that the wood is split and I can not get a screw back in the same hole.
I had the same thing happen; Assuming the bed bracket has been screwed in to the
wall, then you may want to look at the load on the brackets; You may find that
when you sit on the couch there is a load on the bracket trying to pull the
screws out of the wall;
Hard to explain, but I extended the brackets down to the floor, so all the load
would be vertical and not horizontal; I used square tubing from Home Depot. I
also used larger/longer lag bolts (measure first so you don't go all the way
through) - so far it's held up.
Hope this helps
โMar-12-2019 02:42 AM
โMar-11-2019 03:48 PM
โMar-11-2019 03:00 PM
โMar-11-2019 02:30 PM
โMar-11-2019 11:18 AM