cobham wrote: » Think of weight.... my metal framed chairs take off in high winds and get damaged.
Lumen wrote: » Are they all metal or do they have fabric bits?
is this good value?
I can't tell you how good value it is but I can say a neighbour has a very similar set (identical to the one at the top of the furniture page of keter.com website) and its been outside now for about 4-5 years and looks as good as new. Obviously they store the cushions inside during the winter. I suspect the advantage of the keter ones is that there is no steel in them so nothing to rust?
Aluminium last ages, powder coated steel will rust in second year. We got teak first year now so will see but Im not bothering with oiling, it should last years without it, its used on boats sprayed with salt water everyday
We bought cheap wooden furniture from both aldis and from Homebase. Aldi’s furniture outlasted Homebase’s by years.
Ratten is nice but if the legs are also ratten they can unravel.
Regardless of what you get keep it in from the elements overwinter if possible.
I did this to my bench with a blow torch. Apparently it gives extra protection 🤔
I also put a cover over it for winter though.
Depends on the expected use .
If it is outdoor lounge style then the rattan , but you have to care for it and its accessories from the elements.
I have precast concrete sets. Tables ,benches round and rectangular. Repainted one two years ago . Still looks newly painted. No issues with wind/rain damage with these.
Those very cheap plastic chairs can become brittle if left out in the sun too much (think it's to do with UV damage?) and have seen them just shatter when someone's sat on them.
I have a rattan set for the last 5yrs and it is still in excellent condition. As others have mentions, check for a good quality frame, galvanized or powder coated is a must IMO. Mine is quite a large round table and 6 chairs and it really has stood the test of time.
This stuff is expensive, but you will not have to buy furniture ever again and it will keep its looks.
It is made from re-cycled plastic, and is an Irish company designing and manufacturing. It is the sort of furniture that councils are putting in parks and on beaches. The finish in terms colours has developed considerably in recent years to give an array of options
Worth considering if you want something that you can leave out and will not have to maintain in your lifetime.
I have no connection with this company, I have seen their products and was impressed with the quality (and weight).
The benches and some of the chairs look very unstable with the narrow base - I had a wooden version of one of those straight benches (with the foot the same width as the seat) fall over onto my foot when someone stood up and pushed it back, how I didn't get a broken toe I don't know.
Look carefully and you'll see the seats are connected to the benches so they can't fall over. I had to look twice to notice it.
I have some fence posts that I think are from the same guys, the posts seem indestructible but time will tell.
So they are! That's a bit subtle!
Hmmm 🤔🤔🤔
Anything that you bring inside once the fine weather is gone.
All that lovely Chinese plastic and cheap stuff you see at the local co op will be gone in a few years if you leave it outside for too long. Its all a money racket, big container loads of it come in from Shenzhen, people leave it outside to deteriorate and then they rush back to the shop a few years later for brand new equally **** quality stuff so they can leave it rot outside.