Poorly-designed furniture leg |
Unlike many eHow contributors, Rose didn't bother to try to fake a reference to instructions for her desk, just cited some OSHA guidelines for office safety. There's probably a good reason for the lack of a reference: no thinking person would build a desk like Kasandra says to. It's only a little removed from the good old concrete block and board shelves you remember from your first apartment...
According to Rose, you use 4-by-4s for the legs, chunks of cheap wood held to the bottom of a 2-foot by 5-foot sheet of melamine (where you're supposed to get that she doesn't say). The jerry-built (or perhaps we should say most jerry-built) part is how she says to attach the legs:
- "Measure 4 inches in from each side at each corner and make a mark."
- "Position a leg so that it fits against the L mark and line up 4 L-brackets, one against each side of the leg. Insert two 1-inch wood screws through each L-bracket into the leg..."
- "Secure the L-bracket to the bottom of the melamine sheet with 3/4-inch particle board screws. Turn your desk upright and position where desired."
No, Kasandra, you need more than just some cheap-ass angle brackets. First, you should have an apron on the bottom of the melamine sheet, because that's a lot sturdier than some crummy angle brackets. Second, you need support for the legs at the bottom; a way to keep them from spreading and wracking sideways whenever there's even a little stress on the desktop. Oh, yeah, and it sure wouldn't hurt to have some sort of edge covering on the particle board, since it's prone to chipping. [Hint: you can buy melamine edge banding...]
Build a desk following the instructions dashed off by our Dumbass of the Day, and you're gonna need a new desk in no time...
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DDIY - FURNITURE
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