Apologies for wasting a thread on this, but I didn't see a general for furniture or stupid questionsMy desk is L shaped, where each side is a seperate piece from the corner connector, and as such there's a slight 2mm height gap where they meet. That is, sadly, also precisely where I put my mouse and hand to control it, leading to any mousepads placed there feeling unevenIs there anything I can buy (or make, despite having zero expierence with this kind of stuff and not owning power, woodworking tools, a 3d printer, or anything like that) and then cut to fit if necessary like a foam mat or plastic sheet or something, that tapers from being 2mm tall to 0mm or .5mm or something, to just even out the transition a bit, like in the OP pic here?
>>2948456Are the sections held together with hardware or are they just pushed together? If the latter, raise the lower section with shims under the table legs.
>>2948464There's no legs, the two "arms" of the L are solid dressers, and while the corner piece has open space beneath it as seen in the image, there's no flex/give where it meets the other pieces, even if I lift with all my body weight, it doesn''t lift (unlike the back corner of the corner piece, where I do have an extendable steel bar to prevent further sagging)
>>2948456use a belt sander and make it like this insteadalternatively, cut a sheet of something to fit the lowered cavity, the thickness of the pink wedge in your pic
>>2948456you already made this thread and I made diagrams showing you how to fix it and then you said you couldn't do that so I made another diagram showing how to use a kicker board and you didn't listen so stop wasting everyone's time you fucking loser retard
>>2948456>despite having zero expierence with this kind of stuff and not owning power, woodworking tools, a 3d printer, or anything like that)use durabond on the entire top of your desk to make it flat and then put a rug over it. just requires water a bucket and a smearing device.
>>2948509You did, and if there's absolutely no other option I could potentially use a kickerboard, but I'd probably have to pay somebody to install that because I cannot overstate my sheer inexperience with any sort of crafts or construction skills and tools, I'd fuck it up if I did that myself>>2948498I don't have a belt sander, and I'm pretty sure the furniture is like compressed particle board, rather then wood, so I think that'd just ruin itCutting a sheet of something is exactly what I want to do and I think would be most viable, I just don't know what the "something" should be or how i'd cut it: Simply making the length the right size to fit the distance of the front to the back of the desk is easy, but I don\t know how i'd cut the angle of the taper I need, which is wny I'm hoping to find something that already has a 0mm to 2mm taper (across over like a 1cm to 2inch distance) built into it to begin withIf I had the precision/dexterity to cut things down to .5mm, 1mm etc, I can think of ways to achieve it by cutting out multiple strips or bars and gluing it all together, but I don't
>>2948516If you don't mind how it looks a amazonite board (thin compressed wood fiber with a smooth side) might do the trick. It can be cut with a knife or handsaw and simply be laid on top of your table or glued to kt. Search it up and see if it seems okay. The durability is sort of shit and it can create a bit of dust but given the constraints is think it might be a good and cheap solution.
>>2948456Can't you just raise whatever is holding the middle and side by 2mm?
>>2948524No, as I said in >>2948483, the corner piece only flexes at the back, not the sides where it meets the actual "wings" of the L In fact, I suspect they're screwed or bolted in where they meet, since I'm not sure how the corner piece supports itself otherwise, so what >>2948509 says may be impossible, even, now that I'm thnking about it>>2948523searching that is giving me gemstone stuff
>>2948456buy a roll of tape and coat the middle (lower) section of your desk in strips of tape until it is even with the legs (higher) section of your desk. then put something flat on top of it
>>2948669Actually not a terrible idea, if there's tape I can buy that's relatively think so I won't need like 200 layers, and to where it's removable so I don't permanantly bond it to the desk if I need to undo it