This appears to be solidly made and all parts slotted together accurately with no issues. It IS tight which contributes to its finished stability so it's important to grease ie vaseline all joints thoroughly to prevent getting jammed. I didn't do a final tighten till in place which helps and I expect to do a final allen key tweak in a few days when it settles. I was able to assemble and put it in place on my own although a more petite person (I'm 5'10") may struggle to get the arm span to be able to lift and carry it vertically. Do note (see my photo of annotated instruction sheet), that the C and D parts are mislabelled. It is however obvious when examined that the tapered poles are actually at the base as feet. The instructions are folded into the teeny screw/ keybox in case you can't find them! I received a spare bolt/ washer/ nut too which was reassuring. I did take a long time with a small spirit level as well as measuring the 110cm between exterior edges side to side to get the arch sitting true. Do invest the time doing this. If you have a vertical wall of a house or greenhouse in the background it's useful to use as a visual plumb line. Putting a small plank across opposite rungs also helps to set a spirit level on. I dug 4 holes in clay each about 18cm across and perhaps 25 - 30cm deep then used quick setting postcrete to anchor. I've no idea if it will rust (something tells me it might) but it's intended for a generous covering of clematis so it should look fine and last years as a support. Price-wise this compares very favourably to the more elaborate versions (same brand) on sale in garden centres locally. I'm considering buying another oone.
This appears to be solidly made and all parts slotted together accurately with no issues. It IS tight which contributes to its finished stability so it's important to grease ie vaseline all joints thoroughly to prevent getting jammed. I didn't do a final tighten till in place which helps and I expect to do a final allen key tweak in a few days when it settles. I was able to assemble and put it in place on my own although a more petite person (I'm 5'10") may struggle to get the arm span to be able to lift and carry it vertically. Do note (see my photo of annotated instruction sheet), that the C and D parts are mislabelled. It is however obvious when examined that the tapered poles are actually at the base as feet. The instructions are folded into the teeny screw/ keybox in case you can't find them! I received a spare bolt/ washer/ nut too which was reassuring. I did take a long time with a small spirit level as well as measuring the 110cm between exterior edges side to side to get the arch sitting true. Do invest the time doing this. If you have a vertical wall of a house or greenhouse in the background it's useful to use as a visual plumb line. Putting a small plank across opposite rungs also helps to set a spirit level on. I dug 4 holes in clay each about 18cm across and perhaps 25 - 30cm deep then used quick setting postcrete to anchor. I've no idea if it will rust (something tells me it might) but it's intended for a generous covering of clematis so it should look fine and last years as a support. Price-wise this compares very favourably to the more elaborate versions (same brand) on sale in garden centres locally. I'm considering buying another oone.