ferniesnow
I'm doo-ing it!
- Joined
- Dec 2, 2008
- Messages
- 112,035
- Reaction score
- 86,051
- Location
- beautiful, downtown Salmon Arm, BC
Hey guys, once again I would like some education and I know that there are people here who would have real world experiences and tell it like it is.
We are in need of new furniture for our new house. Down sizing has been the theme from the get-go and our living room is no different. Smallish and not conducive to big furniture. We are looking at a chesterfield and we are thinking that the reclining aspect is a requirement. Our problem is that most of everything produced now has power recliners. Our chesterfield cannot be put against a wall to access a wall receptacle due to the design of the living room (and I won't run and extension cord under the rug). The salesmen say, "they can be ordered with a battery"! Well, how does that work?
I am skeptical of most salesmen. The dude says, "it will operate 80-90 times without recharging". So, if there are two people using the chesterfield and they each get up and down a minimum of 4 times during the duration of the evening (I don't think that is uncommon), that would be 8 times an evening and doing the math about 10 days and the battery is ready for recharging. I am putting this out there for real world experience and disregarding the reviews that seem to float around regarding this kind of technology.
We are in need of new furniture for our new house. Down sizing has been the theme from the get-go and our living room is no different. Smallish and not conducive to big furniture. We are looking at a chesterfield and we are thinking that the reclining aspect is a requirement. Our problem is that most of everything produced now has power recliners. Our chesterfield cannot be put against a wall to access a wall receptacle due to the design of the living room (and I won't run and extension cord under the rug). The salesmen say, "they can be ordered with a battery"! Well, how does that work?
I am skeptical of most salesmen. The dude says, "it will operate 80-90 times without recharging". So, if there are two people using the chesterfield and they each get up and down a minimum of 4 times during the duration of the evening (I don't think that is uncommon), that would be 8 times an evening and doing the math about 10 days and the battery is ready for recharging. I am putting this out there for real world experience and disregarding the reviews that seem to float around regarding this kind of technology.