Now, the drawbacks.
lumbar assistance. My understanding is that I am sitting in an armchair on a fully raised gas lift, with my feet flat on the ground, the seat pushed forward, and evenly spread out. I feel support in my lumbar, not in my coccyx, guys, in my loin, but I have it in the highest position at the highest landing rubs almost the same place (((. I wish there were some kind of adjustment that ran the length of the back; perhaps then it would serve as a more general remedy. You must therefore slide down it a little bit further.
a neck brace. It doesn't move toward or away from the neck. The trick is that we rarely sit directly against the chair, instead leaning slightly forward. In this situation, we must move down so that our necks practically run into the support.
In general, though, it's comfortable with such modifications; the only consolation is that you adapt to the chair rather than it to you. Various kapets for 19k)))
I'm not sure, but I heard a phrase someplace. And they managed to gather it using a stick and some ingenuity, which brings me to my next point about this chair.
I took black, however the screws holding the mesh to the seat are silver. Were you too lazy to paint? This truly irritated me.
Welded seams are so carelessly cleaned that cutting yourself won't work. Nevertheless, the knowledge of this is sad in and of itself.
Kotska occasionally comes out of the box with a thin coating of black paint on the metal or without a protective varnish, or both.