Introduction: Corner Computer Desk Made With Pipe and Plywood
With some pipe, fitting, and a left over piece of plywood I made this great desk to adorn our living room corner.
Step 1: The Plan & Parts
Here's the Parts List:
Wood
I used a half a piece of oak plywood that I had in my basement. So roughly 48" x 48"
Pipe
I'm giving you the cuts and you can figure out what lenghts of pipe work best for you. This is just plain ole cheap fence pipe from the home store.
5 x 27" legs
2 x 33" horizontal supports for back
3 x 17" horizontal supports for sides
Fittings
I'm a part owner of Simplified Building Concepts, so of course I got my fittings at a discount. Here are the quantities I used and links to where you can get them on the web site. If you are going to build this exact desk, let me know in the comment field on checkout and I'll throw in an additional 5% discount on the fittings
5 x L61-7 - Flange 1-1/4" - these hold the pipe to the plywood
2 x L10-7 Single Socket Tee 1-1/4" - these terminate the horizontal supports against the front legs.
3 x L21-7 - Side Outlet Tee 1-1/4" - these hold the horizontal supports to the back legs.
5 x 77-7 Plastic Plug - this goes into the end of the pipe and keeps the floor from getting scratched.
Other Stuff
- Edge Tape (Iron on kind) - for making the edge of the plywood look nice
- Screws - for attaching the flanges to the plywood
- Stain - for making the table look nice. (I used Minwax polyshades stain & polyurethan in one)
- Hex Key - for tightening down the fittings
- Screw driver
- Wood Block
- Box Cutter (or sharp straightedge of some sort)
- Iron - for attaching the edge tape
- Circular Saw - for cutting the plywood
- Sandpaper, Tac Cloth and Steel Wool for smoothing our the stained surface.
- Pipe Cutter
- Vise
After I was done my wife made a "skirt" for the desk with some fabric, some wire and some eyelets.
Step 2: Cuts & Staining
First order of business was to cut a section out of the corner of the board where the person would sit at the computer. This is where the keyboard would go.
I measured 24" up from each side, drew a line across and then ripped a cut across the corner of my 4' x 4' section of plywood.
That left me with a nice superman shaped piece of wood.
Staining
I sanded the top before staining and wiped it down with a tac cloth. Then I applied several coats of the stain/poly combo. In between each coat i waited for it to dry and either lightly sanded it or used steel wool to smooth it out. In short, follow the instructions on the stain you buy.
Step 3: Edging the Top
This was going in our living room so I wanted it to have a nice clean edge. So I bought some iron on edge tape. This was surprisingly easy to use.
I precut my pieces LONGER than the edge itself. So I would line up one edge and the leave some hanging off the other side. I would press the iron on to the strip on the edge and run it along slowly (this is in the instructions on the edge stripping). I then ran a wood block over the strip to make sure that it was completely smooth. I then used the box cutter to very carefully and accurately cut of the extra. I then lightly sanded the edge so that it was a nice smooth transition from edge to edge.
This was my first time doing this and I was very pleased with the results.
After I did this, I applied one more coat of stain and poly, this time applying it to the wood edge strip that I just placed on.
Step 4: Legs and Fittings
After the pipe was cut I assembled the legs and bracing (see picture)
- Fittings tighten down on the pipe with a set screw.
- You can set the brace at any height, I put mine lower to the ground.
After the flanges are screwed in I placed the bracing back into the flanges and tightened down the set screw.
In the bottoms of the pipe I inserted plastic pipe caps. These keep the pipe from scratching up the floor.. very important!
Step 5: Finsihed Desk
Make sure all your fittings are tight.. flip it over and you're done. It's a very simple desk and we really like the look of it.
My wife "enhanced" the desk by adding a "skirt" to it.
10 Comments
15 years ago on Introduction
You know, that would be immensely sexier with brass pipes.
Reply 15 years ago on Introduction
lol steampunk
15 years ago on Introduction
Very nice
15 years ago on Introduction
That looks like a realy nice floor, an some really nasty pipe ends. Have you thought about putting anything under them to protect the floor?
Reply 15 years ago on Introduction
Yes, actually there are plastic caps that are attached to the ends of the pipes that protect the floors. See the attached image.
Reply 15 years ago on Introduction
I can't imagine my wife even thinking of letting me do such a project without something like those caps on the end. It's a great desk. I might build one for my son some day. Give his room that "manly" feel to it. No girly skirt around it to hide the pipes. :)
15 years ago on Introduction
Looks great at the end!
Maybe if you don't put anything under there, you can hide, and when somebody needs to use the table, "ARGH!!"
Hahaha, the perfect prank. Nice job.
Reply 15 years ago on Introduction
Actually, it's funny that you would mention that because that is EXACTLY what my kids do!
15 years ago on Introduction
That's a really nice end result, at a point I thought you were just plugging your site but you've actually come up with a great table and a great idea by adding an instructa-discount, shame I live in UK
15 years ago on Introduction
Great job! Sturdy and good looking. You might want to leave the skirt open so heat dissipates easier.