โDec-26-2013 05:38 AM
โDec-27-2013 02:37 PM
wny_pat wrote:I guess I never thought of it being used when traveling. Personally, before I'd put a hole in the floor, I'd tip that baby over and lay it on the floor out of the way. And yes, it's not THAT tall...LOL I don't want the cats to have an advantage over me...LOLamandasgramma wrote:That depends on how tall it is, and how hard you push the brake pedal. The passenger's head might be hurting if you stop to fast:S. At least if you have one as high as the one I have in our stick house family room. The cats look down at us as we walk by.
We have a cat tower at home....and 2 13 lb cats.....the tower doesn't move....they have heavy bases. I wouldn't think you need to bolt it down. ๐
โDec-27-2013 12:04 PM
amandasgramma wrote:That depends on how tall it is, and how hard you push the brake pedal. The passenger's head might be hurting if you stop to fast:S. At least if you have one as high as the one I have in our stick house family room. The cats look down at us as we walk by.
We have a cat tower at home....and 2 13 lb cats.....the tower doesn't move....they have heavy bases. I wouldn't think you need to bolt it down. ๐
โDec-27-2013 12:19 AM
โDec-26-2013 07:39 AM
โDec-26-2013 07:29 AM
dturm wrote:
There are many things (mostly door stops and cabinets) that are anchored through the carpet into the subfloor with 3" screws in our Southwind. I would think the chair anchor, if it's like ours, would be enough to ensure that the tree wouldn't move and a second screw would prevent tip over.
You might be able to fashion a bar that would cross the base of the cat tree and screw the chair anchor with enough leverage to anchor it without any additional screws (the chair anchor is very substantial).
โDec-26-2013 07:24 AM
โDec-26-2013 06:55 AM
โDec-26-2013 06:05 AM