We boughta a Ikea Gulliver
baby crib and some improvements needed to be made. We wanted to have the baby
on same level as our own bed and without one side. This gave easy access
towards the baby during the night. However there was a warning label that prevented
that configuration.
Warning label. |
The bolt for the pin was long enough to fit additional nyloc nut to the end and this way it was possible to create good place for the zip tie. Instead of nyloc nut, a butterfly nut could be used. If you do not trust to zip ties and you are willing to make additional holes then a L-bracket could be used to secure the ends
This is the outcome
and this is how the bed was used couple of months before the baby learned how to
roll. Then there was a risk that the baby would roll between the beds and fall to
the floor. For an engineer that was just one more challange.
The solution for this problem was to secure the beds together. I did not want to fix the beds together, but also allow an access between the beds if one want to sit on the bed next to the baby.
The original bolt was replaced with a threaded rod, a washer plate, a normal nut and an allen head sleeve nut. The normal nut is not really needed, but I found pre-cut threaded rods that were bit too long. I did not want to cut those shorter so I just added one nut.
With this setup the crib was easy to secure to our bed, but it also gave an easy access between the beds. The other cabin hook was secured to the bolt with the rubber band, so it stayed in place when the crib was pivoted. It was just enough to open the hook from the one side.
Crib on the same level as our bed and without one side. |
The solution for this problem was to secure the beds together. I did not want to fix the beds together, but also allow an access between the beds if one want to sit on the bed next to the baby.
This was possible
with a cabin hooks and extended bolts to the crib. The cabin hooks were screwed under
the bed so that you could just fit the hook to the baby crib bolt.
Cabin hooks were screwed under the bed. |
The original bolt was replaced with a threaded rod, a washer plate, a normal nut and an allen head sleeve nut. The normal nut is not really needed, but I found pre-cut threaded rods that were bit too long. I did not want to cut those shorter so I just added one nut.
With this setup the crib was easy to secure to our bed, but it also gave an easy access between the beds. The other cabin hook was secured to the bolt with the rubber band, so it stayed in place when the crib was pivoted. It was just enough to open the hook from the one side.
This is how we used
the crib for first 6 months and when the baby started to crawl the bed base was
lowered, but one side was still off for one month. When the baby was able to climb
to our bed then we needed to attach the side and use the crib "normally".