Posted on | August 4, 2013 | 1 Comment
I’ve been interested in a standing or treadmill desk for some time, but had not found the time and materials to create one.
That changed a few weeks ago when a neighbor had a decent treadmill that they gave me rather than moving it to their new home. (actually, they were trying to sell it, I was not interested in that price, and they surreptitiously left it in the driveway when they left with their last load)

a shot from behind looking at the deck and control panel
Finished a prototype desk this weekend using a Weslo cadence ex14. It is fairly well reviewed online. It happens to fold, a space saver model, so that’s a nice feature, though I’m not certain I can set up the desk in a way that keeps that feature useable.

the original material I had to work with

the treadmill in its folded state
I removed the control panel from the handrails and cut off the outside 1/3 on each side with a hack saw. It was filler material between the central box that held the control system and the attachment point for each hand rail.

the control console for the treadmill that I removed and modified
These are not my photos btw, I grabbed some example shots off the web . . . I was thinking as I was doing it I should be taking pics, but didn’t –
the lower photos of the working prototype are mine.

another shot of the treadmill – the white curved handrails were removed
The handrails attached with two bolts on each side – I removed them (mine were gray, you can see them here, though they are white in this shot).
The wiring from under the base – the motor control system – to the control panel came up through the right base strut, and then went through the right hand rail. I had to open the control panel box and unplug everything so I could pull it back through and out of the hand rail – there were about four connections/plugs.

the control panel after it was freed from the console
Some of the examples I found online keep the hand rails and use them to support some sort of work surface – but in this case, the short, angled, curved rails were not going to work for that.

the wire shelving unit that I used for the initial prototype
I had a wire shelving unit – InterMetro brand – in the basement. I think this will eventually move upstairs to my office, but I wanted to try it out before lugging it up there, so it is in the living room for the moment. So for now it is a likely temp setup with a laptop.

the finished working test product
I set one shelf to go just above the two base struts, and another a few notches down from the top at work surface height when I stand on the belt. It takes at least a couple of shelves to stabilize the rail and column setup.

another shot of the test-ready treadmill desk
It did not take long at all to get the hang of typing and walking. The wife says she thinks I could walk a bit faster. My biggest concerns at this point are that the motor tends to have a relatively loud hum when operating, no matter the speed. I’m also trying to figure out just how to set it up in my office – whether to continue using it with the laptop long term, or to figure out a way to set it up with my dual-screen desktop computer.

from on the treadmill desk – laptop goes top center next to the mouse

on the treadmill looking down at the front of the platform and the lower shelf and control panel
Comments
September 12th, 2013 @ 6:20 pm
recent story on the trend:
http://www.reporterherald.com/the-bottom-line/ci_24079482/is-your-work-desk-helping-you-exercise