Desk-side bookshelves in my room are mostly done, at least -- assembled, sanded, cleaned and in place. It was a cold, windy day, so I assembled the shelves on the basement floor and nearly wrecked my back and knees. Did the sanding outdoors, with the shelves up on fancy sawhorses with built-in clamps. With an orbital sander and high winds, it's not too bad a task. Wiped it down with a tack cloth, gave it a few minutes for the volatiles to dissipate, then took it down to the basement to warm up while we had dinner.
Putting it in place was a little tricky -- it fits between the desk surround and a window frame. But there's just enough room to slide the desk over and work the bookshelves in place.
I forgot, again, that residential practice installs AC receptacles with the ground pin down and as a result, I found myself making a relief cut on the back of the bottom shelf in a cramped corner to clear the fancy tight-clearance plug on the cord for the above-desktop outlet strip. You see, with the ground pin down, the cord exits the plug parallel to the wall and at 45 degrees down and to the right! The shelf height was carefully chosen to be lower than the receptacle but higher than the tall old-type baseboard, which still left it in the way of the cord. I'm not entirely happy with the clearance cut I made and I may pull the shelves out tomorrow and use a Forstner bit to widen the opening and leave it with a rounded corner. Forstner bits are pretty good about drilling partial holes along edges.
I presume there was a compelling reason to make the relief cut instead of flipping the receptacle around. :)
ReplyDeleteSome electrician's forums actually suppress threads that discuss whether to install the outlets ground-down or ground-up. People actually get worked up about it. :D