Seville Classics Airlift Height Adjustable Mobile Rolling Laptop Cart Computer Workstation Desk Table for Home, Office, Classroom, Hospital, w/Wheels, Overbed Sit Stand (24"), Espresso
Foto tirada pelo comprador 7
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Descrição
Furniture Friendly Design - The table features a large (23.62" W x 15.74" D) top with an off-center column and low-profile base that easily slides underneath furniture including couches, recliners, beds and wheelchairs. Quick and Easy Adjustment - Simply lift the top to adjust from 24.8" to 37.6" H and twist the knob to lock easily into place. Smooth-Rolling Ability - Swivel wheels (two locking) let the cart roll from room-to-room with ease and tuck beneath furniture - minimum 4" high. Easy Assembly - All required tools are included with detailed assembly instructions. Put together alone in mere minutes! Base dimensions: 21.75" x 16" x 3" H; top dimensions: 23.62" W x 15.74" D
Avaliações de produtos 3
Foto tirada pelo comprador 7
RoRH
This bed/chair-desk is pretty sleek. The desktop is sturdy, and the edge of the tabletop is not a laminate so the edges are smoother than the more hospital style/two leg one. The feet are sturdier and the stand is also higher quality. The one leg makes it a smooth transition in height vs the two. The knob is easier as well. The leg is slanted towards you, so you can it move in closer to you than the other two leg traditional style, and it’s easier to keep your feet or legs without something blocking a section tip in front of you. I am returning the other option and keeping this one because it is more ergonomic and practical. It is also higher quality.Ps it says media and text. Obviously that option doesn’t apply.
RornDoone
In 2014 I got this small wheelie-cart for use with my laptop as we converted to an electronic health record at the medical clinic where I then worked. In a busy clinic a clinician needs to quickly move from room-to-room. The design works quite nicely in combo with a wheeled doctor-stool: wide enough that, even with so many wheels involved, one set doesn't get hung up on the other's). This desk provides almost effortless mobility. The wide base also serves to prevent overturning. The desktop size iso ample. Best of all, the professional look, functionality and low price were also attractive, instead of the expensive (yet no more functional) models offered specifically for "the healthcare setting."Of note, the height is adjustable from sitting to standing, and the support arm is directed more diagonally forward than suggested by the photo, from the middle-back of the base to center-forward under the desktop. This helps distribute the weight on the desktop and stabilizes it to prevent overturning, though of course it's not strong or stationary enough to support any very heavy or asymmetrical objects, much less sitting, or leaning of a person's full weight. In the capacity for which I was using it in 2014-15, this was a virtually perfect item.2016 update: Gave that desk to a co-worker who really wanted it when I left. Now I find myself in a similar setting, and after looking at everything else up to $150 on Amazon this was STILL my first pick! All the features were still the same, and the price had come down from ~$50 to ~$35. Gotta' love that!New notes: Size is enough for a 17" laptop a small mouse (Amazon, $10-20). Still reliably stable with the larger & heavier laptop, EXCEPT when transitioning over even tiny thresholds or rolling on tiles with grout between that creates an irregular surface; the small casters get hung up and try to tip it every time. The desk worked excellently back within a small clinic with all flat surfaces. Easily and excellently positionable in an exam room, so I can actually interact with patients better than is allowed by the existing counter surfaces. However, now that they're also rolling in a longer hallway the plastic casters sound like a freight train coming! Everyone working there can track me audibly, and after just a few weeks of that I'm getting teased about the significant noise. Plus, my toes keep flipping the locking tab on the two near-side casters, and I usually notice by way of the drag when I go to move. I adapted by carrying the desk as I'm in the hallway. It'seems still light enough to do easily but sorta' defeats the purpose, sooo. . . I installed the standard rollerblade office chair casters today (Amazon $20-40, plus $9ish for a 7/16" drill bit) -- much quieter & smoother, and I absolutely LOVE what I have! I'd challenge anyone to find the same or lower total cost with this quality and all the same features -- or even at double the cost, especially if it's a "medical" one!
Ellen Pierce
This small table is exactly what I wanted for my den! It has enough space for a drink and/or snack & my current reading material. And I love the back pocket for my puzzle books & magazines. Plus it (easily) rolls!…so handy for pulling right up where I need it. The ‘finish’ on the shelves seems to be glued on, but it looks nice…I just try to be careful & use coasters, so sweaty drinks don’t damage it. My only complaint is that I could have used a bit more detail in the assembly instructions, but I’m not much of a DIY’er. And it was still easier than most self-assembly furniture. I’ve only had it for a week, so I don’t know how it will hold up over time, but it seems sturdy & well worth the price.