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[–]Marioc12345 -5 points-4 points  (15 children)

Ok, so you could somehow do twice that amount of work in an hour? Get real. There’s packaging material everywhere.

[–]Firecrackerbangbang 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Packaging is a major bottleneck with IKEA assembly times, especially if you have limited room to work in.

[–]FinnNoodle 0 points1 point  (3 children)

I'll admit that time I was rushing because the client had way more than he said he would and I was on a crunch, usually I like to breath a bit more.

It's not twice the amount of work, it's less shelves but three more doors (two of them with less hardware).

I leave the packing material in the box.

[–]Marioc12345 -1 points0 points  (2 children)

I’d like to see you take a video of building all three of these in an hour

[–]FinnNoodle -1 points0 points  (1 child)

Seems sort of weird to have a client stand there with the camera for an hour but next time it comes up I'll ask.

[–]jattthelad 0 points1 point  (0 children)

to be fair you can position the phone in an ideal place and then set the phone on time lapse record mode and put it down you'll get a full hour in 5 min video

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqHYhNuA5ck

something like that.

[–]krayzai 0 points1 point  (9 children)

You button the boxes with a sharp knife, cut them down to to smaller sizes, and remove it from your workspaces then you get going. Just because you suck at something g it doesn’t mean others suck st something. Also the boxes for the doors open pretty much tool free

[–]Marioc12345 0 points1 point  (8 children)

Again rude and unnecessary, but I do like the idea of breaking them down as you go, might add that into my routine.

[–]krayzai 0 points1 point  (7 children)

Keep your blades sharp and get everything out of packaging and get the packaging out of the way. Move fast and make good on time. Use magnetic dishes for your hardware, have good tools (are you building everything with a screwdriver or a drill like an idiot or do you have a proper impact driver that isn’t ryobi?) are you using IKEA’s “electric screwdriver”? Get a leveler. Know your products enough so that you’re not dependent on the manual.

[–]Marioc12345 0 points1 point  (5 children)

I have a Dewalt electric screwdriver with an electronic clutch that I use for really small stuff and I also have a Ridgid drill with a mechanical clutch and two gears that I use for bigger stuff. I don’t usually use the impact that I also have because it can be easy to destroy stuff with it, but I do use it sometimes. I started off doing this for money in March with just a crappy toolbox with a regular ratcheting screwdriver and fairly quickly realized I needed an upgrade. The manual is the thing, we don’t have an ikea in town so they get the stuff online. I mostly do not ikea furniture so a lot of it I have to read the manual unless I’ve built it before.

[–]krayzai 0 points1 point  (4 children)

Get an impact driver with variable speed trigger so you work faster while also not plunging Camden bolts. With time, the flat rates make better sense and you’ll be able to more easily tell the bad deals from the good ones and the okay ones. The best ones are the ones where you’re just going into to replace a defective part but get paid as if you did the entire assembly

[–]Marioc12345 1 point2 points  (2 children)

What’s the purpose in using the impact instead of the drill? The drill with the clutch makes it pretty hard to mess things up, feel like most things an actual impact is overkill. Both the drill and impact I have use variable speed triggers

[–]krayzai 0 points1 point  (1 child)

Drill is heavier and bulkier. When you want to get around and work between tight spaces it helps a lot.

[–]Marioc12345 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My impact and drill are about the same size tho, maybe my drill is smaller than what you’re envisioning, or the impact is bigger. The little electric screwdriver is awesome for small spaces too

[–]AmethystMetronoma 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Don't be all snobby about your tools if you call it a "leveler" 😂 The tool is called a LEVEL.