West has a specific selling point: ratcheting neck rests. At 74.5 inches wide and 35 inches tall, the Queen Loveseat Power version has the same silhouette as the manual West, same arm shape and frame, but the conversion is power-operated. The ratchet headrests adjust manually once the bed is open, adding lumbar and head support that a standard flat mattress doesn't provide.
The Level mechanism opens with a button. No manual lift, no cushion shuffling; the power motor handles the seat-lift and bed extension in one motion. The back cushions are set aside before pressing the button (light handling, loose backs). Steps to open: press the power button. The bed extends out from the wall; you'll need 89.75 inches of clearance. This is the key difference between this and the manual West Queen Loveseat: here you press a button, there you lift manually.
The bed is a queen at 59.75 by 82 inches, slightly longer than a standard queen, which means taller sleepers have extra legroom. Mattress is a five-inch built-in cold-cured high-density foam pad, CertiPUR certified, rated Daily Sleeper. No coil system, no removable mattress. The longer bed dimension is a practical advantage for anyone over six feet.
Frame is solid spruce with mortise-and-tenon joinery and birch plywood, FSC and PEFC certified. Made in Europe to order, four to six weeks lead time. 100-plus upholstery options in fabric and leather.
West Queen Loveseat Power is the right choice if you want power conversion and the ratchet neck rest feature in a queen loveseat footprint. The trade-off versus the manual West Queen Loveseat: you get the power motor and easier nightly conversion at higher cost. If you need king sleeping width with power operation, the West Power King Sofa is the same mechanism scaled up. If power isn't a priority and you want queen sleeping at a lower price point, the West Queen Loveseat (manual) opens the same way with a hand lift.