

Mann Lake FR812 100-Pack Unassembled Grooved Top and Bottom Endbars Without Holes, 6-1/4-Inch
-
Ruan naude
> 3 dayGreat looking frames good value. Will buy again
-
David
> 3 daygoes together easily
-
Kim
> 3 dayCut very precisely, so assembling went super fast
-
Larry
> 3 dayTotal junk. The quality of these Cuts have so much slop in them they just fall apart during assembly. The bee spacing is only 3/16 in duh. Read the other reviews. The be spacing should be 3/8 in. Anybody that said that these are good frames does not know honey bees. The image posted is two different frames from two different manufacturers. Mann Lake had the poorest quality of cuts, of any frames I have seen. I am also putting together a hive body from Mann Lake, it is also junk quality cuts and they do not want to stand behind their product. Pay a couple dollars more and buy them from better be or may apiary and you will get what you pay for
-
Clayton
> 3 dayGood quality wood, clean cuts, no knots, no cups, and no twists. I knocked one star off for the slots being slightly wide. It causes the joinery to be less secure. This can be remedied with a drop of glue, so not a big deal. Tighter fitting ones have lasted me years with no glue. That said, cant beat this price and convenience.
-
barbp
> 3 dayMy frames arrived on time as described. The 100 pack is an affordable way to keep my bees in comfortable accommodations.
-
Bob
> 3 dayEverything was in great condition, and easy to assemble.
-
Dp boling
Greater than one weekClean material, everything fits and packaged well. Frames are in my hives.
-
Lori Burris
> 3 dayMann lake rocks.
-
Shane Mirkovich
12-06-2025I measured the space between frames, and it is .20 which is less than the .25 minimum required for bees to travel between the sides of the frames. Bees will always have to go over top or under bottom to get to the other side but worse they will try to glue the frames together with propolis. bees build excess comb in a space larger than 3/8 inch. Bees will fill any space less than 1/4 inch with propolis. Therefore, a space between 3/8 inch and 1/4 inch is in a range of acceptable bee space, with 5/16 inch an average that is most acceptable by beekeepers.