Sorry, this is a bit of a rant…

I had to assemble an IKEA flatpack cabinet today.

I always find this process painful because, to me, the instructions are always lacking (and a lot of other flatpack kits have followed IKEA’s trend of picture-only guides). How hard is it to put a name below each component on the parts page (so I know what this weird thing is when it appears on page 22!), or indicate what’s the top/front/back/etc.?

Today it would have been really helpful to know which edge was the top and front for the sides of this kit, rather than flipping back-and-forth through the manual to work it out. The irony is that they got so close to realising this was a factor, since the instructions did actually have two procedures (depending on whether your ceiling was high enough to stand the cabinet up after assembly or whether you needed to assemble it in-situ).

Is it just me and does everyone else just find it easy to follow the instructions, or do a lot of other people struggle with them too?

  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago
    1. Read instructions

    2. Get all the pieces laid out and sorted.

    3. Read instructions, and look for pieces (if you want, you can match them up with postit note numbers)

    4. Finally start assembling while you read along with directions again.

    It sounds like a huge waste of time, but it only takes a couple minutes and then when you go to assemble, you’ll know what is happening and will likely realize as soon as something goes wrong.

    So in the long run, it’ll save a bunch a time and frustration.

    If you’re tying to “build it out of box” you’re setting yourself up for failure. If you’ve seen all the pieces and their corresponding diagrams, you’re less likely to mix them up.

    Is it just me and does everyone else just find it easy to follow the instructions, or do a lot of other people struggle with them too?

    Most people hate it because most people try to “build it out of the box”.

    • Lj404333@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      That’s great until all the screws start looking the same and you can’t tell the difference. The pictures can make them seem shorter or longer than they are

    • Australis13@fedia.ioOP
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      7 days ago

      Thanks. I always read the instructions ahead of time to avoid getting caught out and do sort the pieces first. I’ve never had issues mixing up pieces – the most common issue I have is that sometimes a given step is not clear to me. I find the picture-only guides like IKEA the worst for this as every so often there is a picture which is ambiguous.

      Today’s biggest problem was the orientation issue, particularly as I had to assemble it in-situ. I knew exactly what piece was what, but it was critical to know which edge was the top and front, given how I had to assemble it, and there was no way to know that without going back and forth in the manual to compare how the assembly of the side (early in the manual) was positioned for the final assembly (later in the manual).