Ihr Warenkorb ist leer
Ihr Warenkorb ist leerElena
Bewertet in den USA am24. Februar 2024
All of the legs bent…the metal needs thicker gauge to be sturdier. They bent where the top of the leg meets the joint. There was some wind but this had the sand bag attachments to all of its legs. It’s just not strong enough to hold up. Don’t waste your money. Would have added photos but it’s not letting me add any.
Joyce D.
Bewertet in den USA am19. Juni 2024
Cost too much for me to return it. Cost was $115, return which I have to pay for was $220 approximately. It was to large for what I needed, wasn’t really aware of the exact size.
Joe
Bewertet in Großbritannien am 12. Januar 2024
I bought this item based on the description and reviews. Unfortunately at the first sign of wind, the stitching seams parted and the bungee holes ripped off meaning the sides came loose.This cannot be made as easily as it says in the description. the roof and sides easily blow away even with 3 peopleAlso the metal that they use for the legs is cheap and flimsy and rust easily
Candace Miller
Bewertet in den USA am3. August 2023
Was surprised at how sturdy this was for the price. The instructions were terrible, but it was easy to figure out how it went. We did have 3 people which is what I recommend. The cover is heavier than I thought it would be. The post are thick and strong.
HAS
Bewertet in Großbritannien am 2. Oktober 2023
The delivery men were great - cheerful, friendly, and helpful "above and beyond" - but Amazon won't let me review the delivery!!The boxed item weighs a ton, but individual parts don't. Once you figure out the instructions (e.g. why are there so many part 3, but of two different designs? Better to have labelled them part 3a and part 3b) it's reasonably simple to erect. The illustrations are of marginal help, but again insufficiently informative.3 of us (a 50-something, 60-something and 70-something) managed to erect it in just over 3 hours.Although Amazon markets this as a garage-cum-party tent, the instructions simply call it a party tent. Although it can be set at 3 different heights to suit your needs, it does not mention that if you erect it to less than maximum height, it is not possible to secure bottom of the side or end walls, or the corner flaps, to the frame or ground. I have put up my tent on the second-lowest height, and there is a good 18" of unsecured "wall" at the bottom, which I've had to anchor outside with large stones. Also - the side panels do not meet at the corners. There is a gap of several inches between them, which is covered by a long thin corner panel on the outside. Unfortunately, there is no way of securing the corner panel, which flaps like a pennant in the slightest breeze. The tent is in no way windproof. The roof drapes unsecured over the walls, being fixed higher up.As for the windows - an hour after we'd erected the tent, it started to rain. The waterproof flaps were down over the mesh windows - but the top seams leaked on all six, and water ran down the mesh and lower walls.Okay for a party shelter, but keep things away from the walls in rainy conditions!UPDATEHaving just put this up for emergency storage, I was horrified when Storm Babet was promptly announced. The gazebo was not very sturdily fixed, and at the first sign of the gale, the walls started flapping wildly about, guy ropes were uprooted, and velcro fixings and bungees ties all tore off. The 16 heavy stones with which I had weighted the bottom of the side and end walls all rolled away as though they weighed nothing.I hastily searched Amazon and found an eyelet tool, eyelets, bungee ties, strong tent pegs, and guy ropes all available for delivery within a few hours.I managed to set some 30 additional eyelets while gale-force winds whipped the "walls" like sails on a seagoing ship of old, and I secured the gazebo walls to the frame using these additional bungee ties at multiple places. The roof seemed reasonably secure, with sufficient bungees to hold it. When the wind gusted and got inside the gazebo, the roof "vented" the air pressure very effectively. So I did not add anything other than 4 more guy ropes (also, I didn't fancy being up a step ladder, on a lawn rapidly turning into a bog, and in the dark, battered by a gale ...).With the extra fixing points for bungee ties, plus 4 extra guy ropes outside and another 4 attached directly to the frame inside for bracing, the gazebo thereafter withstood the storm remarkably well. Just one of the additional bungees tore. Had I not effected the emergency repair measures, the gazebo would certainly have torn and blown away!I'm impressed that the gazebo withstood such extreme weather with help from the extra fixings (it is not intended for use in severe weather conditions). I would have taken it down except that I had things stored in it and nowhere else to put them. However, the gazebo is NOT WATERPROOF. The windows leak in even light rain. In the storm, everything inside got soaked ...
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