Got an Ikea stainless steel frying pan for about fifteen quid that is brilliant. Most of their assembly instructions are absolute bab though.
You got to be sure with IKEA, because they're very good in making the metal look like stainless. I'm pretty good at spotting stainless on sight, but in their case I need a magnet to be sure.
If the magnet clings it's not stainless.
If it attracts a little, it's kitchen stainless (the cheapest 304 grade).
If it doesn't attract at al, it's the next expensive stainless 316 grade, which is chosen when salt may be present.
What is also possible with IKEA, is that a very thin outer layer / coating really is stainless.
But underneath it, not stainless, downto even no metal at all - woord, plastic, whatever.
IKEA is made easy to assemble, disassembly is quite another story.
In cities foreigner suburbs free place gets every now and then filled with furniture that was disassembled without (dedicated) tools.
That's also why the state sponsored second hand shops say they don't like IKEA.
A rather wondering statement since why would second hand shops disassemble first what they sell. But as turned out, in order to get the working hours filled, they disassemble furniture hidden in their magazine, to then reassemble in the shop so shoppers can see they're Men At Work.
Some of IKEA's products can't be disassembled without it being destructive.
IKEA's products also are not to be put in a same basket, prices vary, so do the ways it was done with.