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Mounting putty to route cords
Mounting putty to route cords











Still, it's nice enough and it's reasonably handy having the top shelf to quickly dump paper or usb sticks etc on.This an alternative to using the VPN for remotely accessing your work computer. A simple flat surface four legged desk of the same dimensions would be preferable. I haven't put anything essential on my shelves and the tradeoff from them is it's hard to have a tri-monitor setup or a dual-monitor setup with any large/wide monitors, and also the back can't take clamps for monitor arms since it's got a right angle on it. Overall I honestly wouldn't recommend this desk to people buying unless they have a specific need for lots of shelves or would stack loads of audio equipment under the middle shelf or something along those lines. If your monitors aren't too tall/wide you can make use of those shelves without increasing your overall desk width. I also saw someone's setup recently where they had the little wing shelves pointing inwards instead of outwards which was kinda neat.

#MOUNTING PUTTY TO ROUTE CORDS PC#

Because of the twin holes at the rear corners and the fact I have plugboard on the bottom left shelf and PC on the right, the tray ends up being in the perfect spot for routing from anywhere to anywhere. The desk is officially too thin even for the screws-only mounting method but they don't seem to have caused any lumps on the other side. I recently got a cable management tray (Signum from IKEA) and it works really well with this desk, high recommend it. They're badly made and just darken the setup I agree with having not put in the side panels.If you ever put in a proper speaker setup remember you can put on both of the wing shelves and lower their mounting positions greatly.Buy a proper large duster on a stick and keep it nearby, the black gets dusty really easily especially the metal bar structures on the sides.If you ever decide to remove them and do some kind of custom finish there, it doesn't matter if the glue causes some damage, you'll be needing to do work to cover over it all anyway The cup holders pop out quite easily and when they're out the wood there is kinda jagged, so just glue them in now.Definitely the most important thing, as if you're anything like me you'll stick your feet through the back gap and fiddle with the loose cables obsessively You can attach stuff to that back panel to ziptie cables to (or just use a cable tray like others suggested).Be careful if you use a 2-3 monitor VESA mount, I don't trust the material of this desk not to shear, if you clamp a mount to the desk give it some stronger thin plates of some sort to spread the load further.It seems nice to be able to hide all your cables and HDDs etc underneath it, but it's actually kind of inconvenient for tinkering with cabling, and if you don't need it it doesn't make the desk any tidier, arguably less tidy Consider removing the bottom monitor shelf as well if you don't use it.You can put the PC on the shelf once it's on the floor to avoid dust, or if that seems too messy, you can get a small anti-scratch cover people use for desk chairs on wooden floors and place that under the PC instead (possibly cut down) Remove one of the bottom shelves so you can slot the PC into that space, I have the same issue with my case being too tall for the metal bar.Laptop and peripheral deals are encouraged.

mounting putty to route cords

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mounting putty to route cords

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  • Mounting putty to route cords