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Model: FLEXISPOT 79 x 32 Inch Large Standing Desk, Stand Up Desk with Splice Board, Rising Desks for Home Office, Office Desk with Cup Holder and Headphone Hook (Black Frame + Black Top, 2 Packages)
Deal History
Deal History includes data from multiple reputable stores, such as Best Buy, Target, and Walmart. The lowest price among stores for a given day is selected as the "Sale Price".
Sale Price does not include sale prices at Amazon unless a deal was posted by a community member.
Not who you asked, but I have 4 standing desks.
The 4 segments of chip board are literally junk tier material and will be damaged the first time you forget a drink on it.
This is a single motor desk rated for ~154lbs. You can get a dual motor set of legs for $99. https://a.co/d/aGzLX0A
Then look on marketplace or similar sites. Or find a place (like southeastern salvage for me) where they sell nice large butcher block slabs for $100 (they carry a range of sizes, wood species, and thicknesses for $60-400), buy a can of some sort of clear coat, lacquer, epoxy, etc and seal the wood to protect it. A little extra leg work and $200 can get you a long way towards a much nicer desk.
You can also cut it down to a different size or shape in the future and just re-seal it. You can't do that with their particle board.
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from youbuynow
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why? can you elaborate?
Not who you asked, but I have 4 standing desks.
The 4 segments of chip board are literally junk tier material and will be damaged the first time you forget a drink on it.
This is a single motor desk rated for ~154lbs. You can get a dual motor set of legs for $99. https://a.co/d/aGzLX0A
Then look on marketplace or similar sites. Or find a place (like southeastern salvage for me) where they sell nice large butcher block slabs for $100 (they carry a range of sizes, wood species, and thicknesses for $60-400), buy a can of some sort of clear coat, lacquer, epoxy, etc and seal the wood to protect it. A little extra leg work and $200 can get you a long way towards a much nicer desk.
You can also cut it down to a different size or shape in the future and just re-seal it. You can't do that with their particle board.
Not who you asked, but I have 4 standing desks.
The 4 segments of chip board are literally junk tier material and will be damaged the first time you forget a drink on it.
This is a single motor desk rated for ~154lbs. You can get a dual motor set of legs for $99. https://a.co/d/aGzLX0A
Then look on marketplace or similar sites. Or find a place (like southeastern salvage for me) where they sell nice large butcher block slabs for $100 (they carry a range of sizes, wood species, and thicknesses for $60-400), buy a can of some sort of clear coat, lacquer, epoxy, etc and seal the wood to protect it. A little extra leg work and $200 can get you a long way towards a much nicer desk.
You can also cut it down to a different size or shape in the future and just re-seal it. You can't do that with their particle board.
i got a 60x30 engineered butcher block from home depot for like $120. it's engineered, but you dont have to do the extra setup steps
Last edited by k_white_ December 26, 2025 at 08:50 AM.
i got an engineered butcher block from home depot for like $120. it's engineered, but you dont have to do the extra setup steps
I have the husky desktop for 1 desk and it is fine. Its just a little short depth wise. I ended up making it a workbench because it was a little cramped for my monitor, keyboard, and mouse. Other than that subjective complaint, I thought it was great for the price.
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Not who you asked, but I have 4 standing desks.
The 4 segments of chip board are literally junk tier material and will be damaged the first time you forget a drink on it.
This is a single motor desk rated for ~154lbs. You can get a dual motor set of legs for $99. https://a.co/d/aGzLX0A
Then look on marketplace or similar sites. Or find a place (like southeastern salvage for me) where they sell nice large butcher block slabs for $100 (they carry a range of sizes, wood species, and thicknesses for $60-400), buy a can of some sort of clear coat, lacquer, epoxy, etc and seal the wood to protect it. A little extra leg work and $200 can get you a long way towards a much nicer desk.
You can also cut it down to a different size or shape in the future and just re-seal it. You can't do that with their particle board.
Do you have a good one piece of table top recommend to buy?
Do you have a good one piece of table top recommend to buy?
Not really. I don't know you're areas pricing and availability. Also, a single slab of wood is much harder to come by in reality. They need a tree large enough to saw and maintain a decent thickness without knots or other damage and then transport that piece. That is what drives the cost up and makes butcher block so appealing. They can make it out of almost anything and size it to almost anything you could want. Just know when shopping for it, you want to look for table tops built out of longer pieces of wood.
Check out a rocker, woodcraft, or other wood dealer (there's some really cool places in other parts of the country, but none near me) for larger wood slabs. You just need to be aware of the weight at some point before you get too big or dense for the table to lift. I made that mistake once and built a nice table for 3D printers, but didn't account for (4) 50 lb printers and the weight of the wood.
Not who you asked, but I have 4 standing desks.
The 4 segments of chip board are literally junk tier material and will be damaged the first time you forget a drink on it.
This is a single motor desk rated for ~154lbs. You can get a dual motor set of legs for $99. https://a.co/d/aGzLX0A
Then look on marketplace or similar sites. Or find a place (like southeastern salvage for me) where they sell nice large butcher block slabs for $100 (they carry a range of sizes, wood species, and thicknesses for $60-400), buy a can of some sort of clear coat, lacquer, epoxy, etc and seal the wood to protect it. A little extra leg work and $200 can get you a long way towards a much nicer desk.
You can also cut it down to a different size or shape in the future and just re-seal it. You can't do that with their particle board.
Okay but what about if you don't want to do any of that extra work for a table? I don't want to go out and buy sealant, epoxy, cut it down to size, or piece together deals that show up on the used market?
Is this still considered a bad deal?
Not who you asked, but I have 4 standing desks.
The 4 segments of chip board are literally junk tier material and will be damaged the first time you forget a drink on it.
This is a single motor desk rated for ~154lbs. You can get a dual motor set of legs for $99. https://a.co/d/aGzLX0A
Then look on marketplace or similar sites. Or find a place (like southeastern salvage for me) where they sell nice large butcher block slabs for $100 (they carry a range of sizes, wood species, and thicknesses for $60-400), buy a can of some sort of clear coat, lacquer, epoxy, etc and seal the wood to protect it. A little extra leg work and $200 can get you a long way towards a much nicer desk.
You can also cut it down to a different size or shape in the future and just re-seal it. You can't do that with their particle board.
Okay but what about if you don't want to do any of that extra work for a table? I don't want to go out and buy sealant, epoxy, cut it down to size, or piece together deals that show up on the used market? Is this still considered a bad deal?
Look at the other responses. You can buy a prefinished top that is way nicer for the same money or less. My first recommendation is what I do because I build them custom with routed lines and epoxy pours to make them unique, but you don't have to do all that and still end up with a better table.
Okay but what about if you don't want to do any of that extra work for a table? I don't want to go out and buy sealant, epoxy, cut it down to size, or piece together deals that show up on the used market? Is this still considered a bad deal?
Also, while the used market is an option. A lot of smaller businesses sell brand new desktops on marketplace. Usually a wholesaler or similar. You might even have a warehouse on the next block and not even know it.
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Look at the other responses. You can buy a prefinished top that is way nicer for the same money or less. My first recommendation is what I do because I build them custom with routed lines and epoxy pours to make them unique, but you don't have to do all that and still end up with a better table.
I did but I can't find anything that's close to 79" x 32" for $150. Maybe I'm limiting myself by just looking on Amazon.
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The 4 segments of chip board are literally junk tier material and will be damaged the first time you forget a drink on it.
This is a single motor desk rated for ~154lbs. You can get a dual motor set of legs for $99.
https://a.co/d/aGzLX0A
Then look on marketplace or similar sites. Or find a place (like southeastern salvage for me) where they sell nice large butcher block slabs for $100 (they carry a range of sizes, wood species, and thicknesses for $60-400), buy a can of some sort of clear coat, lacquer, epoxy, etc and seal the wood to protect it. A little extra leg work and $200 can get you a long way towards a much nicer desk.
You can also cut it down to a different size or shape in the future and just re-seal it. You can't do that with their particle board.
16 Comments
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Electricalsushi
The 4 segments of chip board are literally junk tier material and will be damaged the first time you forget a drink on it.
This is a single motor desk rated for ~154lbs. You can get a dual motor set of legs for $99.
https://a.co/d/aGzLX0A
Then look on marketplace or similar sites. Or find a place (like southeastern salvage for me) where they sell nice large butcher block slabs for $100 (they carry a range of sizes, wood species, and thicknesses for $60-400), buy a can of some sort of clear coat, lacquer, epoxy, etc and seal the wood to protect it. A little extra leg work and $200 can get you a long way towards a much nicer desk.
You can also cut it down to a different size or shape in the future and just re-seal it. You can't do that with their particle board.
The 4 segments of chip board are literally junk tier material and will be damaged the first time you forget a drink on it.
This is a single motor desk rated for ~154lbs. You can get a dual motor set of legs for $99.
https://a.co/d/aGzLX0A
Then look on marketplace or similar sites. Or find a place (like southeastern salvage for me) where they sell nice large butcher block slabs for $100 (they carry a range of sizes, wood species, and thicknesses for $60-400), buy a can of some sort of clear coat, lacquer, epoxy, etc and seal the wood to protect it. A little extra leg work and $200 can get you a long way towards a much nicer desk.
You can also cut it down to a different size or shape in the future and just re-seal it. You can't do that with their particle board.
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The 4 segments of chip board are literally junk tier material and will be damaged the first time you forget a drink on it.
This is a single motor desk rated for ~154lbs. You can get a dual motor set of legs for $99.
https://a.co/d/aGzLX0A
Then look on marketplace or similar sites. Or find a place (like southeastern salvage for me) where they sell nice large butcher block slabs for $100 (they carry a range of sizes, wood species, and thicknesses for $60-400), buy a can of some sort of clear coat, lacquer, epoxy, etc and seal the wood to protect it. A little extra leg work and $200 can get you a long way towards a much nicer desk.
You can also cut it down to a different size or shape in the future and just re-seal it. You can't do that with their particle board.
Check out a rocker, woodcraft, or other wood dealer (there's some really cool places in other parts of the country, but none near me) for larger wood slabs. You just need to be aware of the weight at some point before you get too big or dense for the table to lift. I made that mistake once and built a nice table for 3D printers, but didn't account for (4) 50 lb printers and the weight of the wood.
The 4 segments of chip board are literally junk tier material and will be damaged the first time you forget a drink on it.
This is a single motor desk rated for ~154lbs. You can get a dual motor set of legs for $99.
https://a.co/d/aGzLX0A
Then look on marketplace or similar sites. Or find a place (like southeastern salvage for me) where they sell nice large butcher block slabs for $100 (they carry a range of sizes, wood species, and thicknesses for $60-400), buy a can of some sort of clear coat, lacquer, epoxy, etc and seal the wood to protect it. A little extra leg work and $200 can get you a long way towards a much nicer desk.
You can also cut it down to a different size or shape in the future and just re-seal it. You can't do that with their particle board.
Is this still considered a bad deal?
The 4 segments of chip board are literally junk tier material and will be damaged the first time you forget a drink on it.
This is a single motor desk rated for ~154lbs. You can get a dual motor set of legs for $99.
https://a.co/d/aGzLX0A
Then look on marketplace or similar sites. Or find a place (like southeastern salvage for me) where they sell nice large butcher block slabs for $100 (they carry a range of sizes, wood species, and thicknesses for $60-400), buy a can of some sort of clear coat, lacquer, epoxy, etc and seal the wood to protect it. A little extra leg work and $200 can get you a long way towards a much nicer desk.
You can also cut it down to a different size or shape in the future and just re-seal it. You can't do that with their particle board.
You could also look at something like this with a little less depth, but thicker.
https://www.homedepot.c
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