Its a bed frame it s a mattress fine and seems pretty sturdy (doesnt seem to have any points that wiggle or squeak). It does have some minor oddities though that Id even suggest are design/manufacturing defects.
First off, as others have pointed out, this frame is *not* non/stick. It looks like most other frames with similar designs have a bit of a lip, such that the outside frame is a little bit higher than the slats, so the mattress falls down onto the slats and the frame holds it centered in place. On this frame, the slats are completely flush with the frame, so there is nothing holding the mattress. The odd part is that all theyd have to do is move the brackets welds about 1/2 lower (theres plenty of room) in order to make it *actually* non/stick.
This almost seems like something that was miscommunicated between the people doing the design and the manufacturing, given how trivial it wouldve been. The mattress doesnt slide around too much so far, but it would be so much nicer to not worry about it and always have the mattress automatically centered/secured.
The second nit is that many of the nuts/bolts at the corners required quite a lot of force to tighten, and even when seemingly fully tightened, several of the bolt heads still stick out about 1mm. It doesnt seem to be a problem in terms of the structural integrity and isnt noticeable unless you look closely, but it is a little bit OCD/triggering when you know its there.
Otherwise the frame does what it needs to do. It has holes for a headboard and even a footboard. Not sure if the footboard holes are inional or luck/of/the/draw though.
Sturdy, fairly easy to assemble. Some quirks.
Its a bed frame it s a mattress fine and seems pretty sturdy (doesnt seem to have any points that wiggle or squeak). It does have some minor oddities though that Id even suggest are design/manufacturing defects. First off, as others have pointed out, this frame is *not* non/stick. It looks like most other frames with similar designs have a bit of a lip, such that the outside frame is a little bit higher than the slats, so the mattress falls down onto the slats and the frame holds it centered in place. On this frame, the slats are completely flush with the frame, so there is nothing holding the mattress. The odd part is that all theyd have to do is move the brackets welds about 1/2 lower (theres plenty of room) in order to make it *actually* non/stick. This almost seems like something that was miscommunicated between the people doing the design and the manufacturing, given how trivial it wouldve been. The mattress doesnt slide around too much so far, but it would be so much nicer to not worry about it and always have the mattress automatically centered/secured. The second nit is that many of the nuts/bolts at the corners required quite a lot of force to tighten, and even when seemingly fully tightened, several of the bolt heads still stick out about 1mm. It doesnt seem to be a problem in terms of the structural integrity and isnt noticeable unless you look closely, but it is a little bit OCD/triggering when you know its there. Otherwise the frame does what it needs to do. It has holes for a headboard and even a footboard. Not sure if the footboard holes are inional or luck/of/the/draw though.