Simple...they need the adjustment threads at the TOP of the legs, under the tabletop.
Then it's simple to adjust....where's MY MONEY ?....:cool:
Funny story...me and the Mrs went to a new seafood restaurant in St Augustine, and the table was wobbly, so I was trying to make it quit wobblin' and somehow they had 'tiled" the tabletop to the wall...:willynilly
...well long story short, me tryin' to level it I pulled it off the wall by accident (hell, I didn't know it was tiled to it ), so I finally got it stuck back onto it's ledge, and went on with dinner....which was fantastic BTW....told the guy when we left to check it out, cause it was loose on the wall...:grin
Rock you're overthinking this. There's a problem for every solution if you want there to be. I guess just stay home and eat at the house if it bothers you that much.
I am serious about requesting a booth. I've been to enough places especially if they're on a wait, seems like the first table to open up is the one right by the front door so you get bumped by every patron who walks through the place. I'll wait for a booth if it takes an extra 10 minutes so be it. It's a more comfortable dining experience.
Now if you don't want to wait, you get to the table and it's wobbly, don't sit down. Tell the hostess/host that you want it fixed first. Put it on them. Beyond the remedies I mentioned earlier that's really about all you can do.
Now if you want to go and invent small wooden shims that people can keep in their pockets specifically for this application, good luck!.
I am saying invent a table that won't wobble. 3 legs can wobble if the floor is catywampus. No bandaid on a wound type fix. Polar could invent a floating table like his star wars buddies use
Proud supporter of the anti fishing, terroristic (lol what?) movement known as Greenpeace.
I am saying invent a table that won't wobble. 3 legs can wobble if the floor is catywampus. No bandaid on a wound type fix. Polar could invent a floating table like his star wars buddies use
all slab concrete poured in Florida is going to crack, so you'll never have perfectly flat floors to begin with. I am sure there are tables out right now that have some sort of spring mounted levelers on them, but you'll never see them at a restaurant. Too much $$$$. If it's an extra $100.00 or even $50.00 per table they're not going to pay it. Especially not the chains. If Chilis decided to replace every one of it's tables at every restaurant, it'd be millions of dollars. The smaller mom and pop places can't afford it either, they're just trying to keep the doors open. Especially in FL where you have such a seasonal clientele. They have to make their snow bird money now and they'll starve from April to November.
The thing is all restaurant tables have legs with adjustable tabs on the bottom, but when they move them the tabs fall out and get swept up and thrown away. A good restaurant owner should know and repair those daily or weekly at the very least. It takes about a minute to put a replacement on and set it.
Replies
So it van wobble too?
Then it's simple to adjust....where's MY MONEY ?....:cool:
Funny story...me and the Mrs went to a new seafood restaurant in St Augustine, and the table was wobbly, so I was trying to make it quit wobblin' and somehow they had 'tiled" the tabletop to the wall...:willynilly
...well long story short, me tryin' to level it I pulled it off the wall by accident (hell, I didn't know it was tiled to it ), so I finally got it stuck back onto it's ledge, and went on with dinner....which was fantastic BTW....told the guy when we left to check it out, cause it was loose on the wall...:grin
go elswhere
jam your pocket knife under a leg if you must.
Or sugar packets.
And all you have is a cloth napkin.
I make it work rather than complain. If i'm drinking the table is gonna be wobbling by the time I get up regardless.
Or, you can request a booth like we do 90% of the time anyway and not have to worry about a table.
.
Except polar
Now if you don't want to wait, you get to the table and it's wobbly, don't sit down. Tell the hostess/host that you want it fixed first. Put it on them. Beyond the remedies I mentioned earlier that's really about all you can do.
Now if you want to go and invent small wooden shims that people can keep in their pockets specifically for this application, good luck!.
all slab concrete poured in Florida is going to crack, so you'll never have perfectly flat floors to begin with. I am sure there are tables out right now that have some sort of spring mounted levelers on them, but you'll never see them at a restaurant. Too much $$$$. If it's an extra $100.00 or even $50.00 per table they're not going to pay it. Especially not the chains. If Chilis decided to replace every one of it's tables at every restaurant, it'd be millions of dollars. The smaller mom and pop places can't afford it either, they're just trying to keep the doors open. Especially in FL where you have such a seasonal clientele. They have to make their snow bird money now and they'll starve from April to November.
The thing is all restaurant tables have legs with adjustable tabs on the bottom, but when they move them the tabs fall out and get swept up and thrown away. A good restaurant owner should know and repair those daily or weekly at the very least. It takes about a minute to put a replacement on and set it.