English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

7 answers

Take a yardstick, or other straight edge, and lay at an angle, from the sofa back, to the front edge of the seat (after youve removed the cushions). Then measure from the straight edge, to the bottom rear corner of the sofa (the back leg, usually) {If we were to assume the sofa is exactly 90 degrees from seat to back, then this dimension would come out around 24 inches, depending on the thickness of the sofa back}. As long as this measurement is smaller than 32", then you can simply tilt the sofa at an angle as you carry it in.

With the sofa at 87" and the door at 84", you won't be able to stand it on end, and get it to fit thru.

Ive moved a lot of furniture over the years, and you'd be surprised just how big some items can be, and still get them thru the door, lol.

Some tips for moving large objects like a sofa... remove the 'feet' (normally they just unscrew), and remove the door from the frame (usually by removing hinge pin, or unscrewing the hinge from the frame)... Oh, and use a couple of strong individuals, as they may need to hold the furniture at some odd angles to get it thru narrow places, lol.

Good Luck. =D

2006-06-05 20:21:40 · answer #1 · answered by thewrangler_sw 7 · 3 1

it may be - if you stand the sofa on one end and slide it around. Because a sofa is shaped like an L, you can put one end of the L in the doorway, then slip it around sideways, so the entire width or height is never actually in the door at once.

2006-06-05 10:28:13 · answer #2 · answered by Kutekymmee 6 · 0 0

It sounds like you have a blivet. For those unintaited a blivet is 15lbs of sh-- in a 10lb bag. Remove the door, try unscrewing the feet and if those fail strat looking for a really oversized window.

2006-06-05 20:57:52 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Take the door frame out. The jambs are at least 5/8" thick.

2006-06-05 10:27:01 · answer #4 · answered by unbelievable 4 · 0 0

YES! At an angle. Try about 40-60 degree angle.

2006-06-05 10:26:54 · answer #5 · answered by mrsdebra1966 7 · 0 0

remove the door jamb...
you will receive another 6 " on all sides....

2006-06-05 10:26:48 · answer #6 · answered by blackpualani 2 · 0 0

Use a chainsaw ... and superglue :^)

2006-06-05 10:27:11 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers