Upgrading from particleboard

When I first moved back to San Diego about 8 years ago, I searched for a large desk to fit in my apartment. I ended up buying 3 desk pieces (2 the same, one a large corner piece). The desks gave me a lot of room and weren’t cheap. Over the last 8 years, the desks have moved into 2 different houses, moved because we had carpet installed twice and then the last time they were moved is when I got a new floor in my office. The problem with this is that particleboard doesn’t move very well when there are screws, pins, etc. in them. I had drywall screws holding it together.

This past weekend, my wife and I were at Ikea looking for a new kitchen table (we both came into the marriage with the same small, square table that is a bit small for the two of us to use for anything) and I saw some desk systems. When we got home, I went to Ikea’s website and started looking at tables where you pick the top and legs and put it together. I found a solid beech top with some legs. Wow, a solid wood top that actually looked nice! I was thinking of getting the adjustable legs, but when I went back to look at them, noticed that they were a friction fit such that if something gave way in the leg, the desk would fall down. I only sort of trust stuff from Ikea as there is a reason it is inexpensive. I ended up getting 3 tables with fixed legs and am quite happy with the setup.

In addition, I picked up 2 of their cable racks so that I can hide most of my cables under the desks.

I feel like a kid in a candy store with my new desk!

3 Replies to “Upgrading from particleboard”

  1. 2 questions.
    1. How many pieces did it come in? Stuff from Ikea usually comes in 8000-10000 pieces.
    2. What do you use the rectangle monitor for? Have never seen a monitor like that…

  2. Each desk came in a top (1 piece) and 4 legs (5 screws, 1 base plate, 1 leg, 1 plastic end cap). Amazingly I just had to use a Phillips head screw tip on my drill instead of all those hex tips.

    The rectangular monitor is just a 24″ display rotated 90 degrees. It’s useful for viewing long pages of text, i.e. code.

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