🖥️ Elevate your workspace, one organizer at a time!
The 2 Set Desk Organizers by RHONZHAO feature a robust metal mesh design, offering two compartments for efficient storage of magazines, documents, and office supplies. With a lightweight and portable structure, this organizer is perfect for any professional setting, ensuring your workspace remains tidy and accessible.
Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
Manufacturer | RHONZHAO |
UPC | 785034362033 |
Item Weight | 2.5 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 9.9 x 6.7 x 9.9 inches |
Country of Origin | China |
Item model number | desktop organizer |
Style | Portable |
Finish | Lacquered |
Mounting Type | Tabletop |
Special Features | Desk Organizers |
Usage | File Holder, Office supplies desk organizer |
Included Components | Hardware |
Batteries Included? | No |
Batteries Required? | No |
A**R
Excellent!
This product is excellent. It looks great and is very sturdy.
P**1
Using for lid storage
I am using this to store bowl lids. Not enough storage in cabinets so this works extremely well for storing my bowl lids.
C**R
Rated as repurposed speaker protectors, their weaknesses transformed into strengths
See photo, but in this first "R-14PM" generation of my multimedia/computer speakers, Klipsch included a remote and front mounted infrared receiver. Most any acoustically transparent grill cloth should be light transparent as well and so shouldn't impede IR transmission, yet Klipsch didn't include grills until the next generation. If I'd known that, I'd have skipped over these, but I do love them, coupled with the absolute necessity of a good subwoofer, yet I would never feel content with them until I'd given them the protection they deserve, against the one abuse they weren't built to withstand, me.I weighed several treatments for protecting the expensive 4 inch acoustic drivers, before settling on these magazine racks as a totally non-invasive way to modify my speakers, while easing my mind that I'd never accidentally rip a hole through them. Non invasive means I didn't have to drill a hole through, apply stick'em to, clamp to, or put any too tight, surface marring strap around the speaker enclosuresThe material gauge should have been thicker for my use or for magazines. These are just thick enough to withstand the vibrations from my speakers without adding any audible ringing, while being too weak to resist being wobbly to the touch or to be able to form smoothly stretched, sight pleasing planes (they're visibly wavy). When ordering though, I also found silicone pads, long & thin, for drying fragile glass, whose width fit perfectly inside these, with the center divider removed, only needing to trim one length to 10 inches, plus, while I could have secured these to a wooden or metal platform, including desks, shelves, or speaker stands, I was already using additional silicone pot holder mats beneath the existing speakers, and I could have also used cork, felt, foam or other suitable acoustic damping padding. These do actually come with shallow rubber feet installed, but with the floppines of the screen/frame, other than to make the racks slide resistant, those preinstalled feet don't seem to address any other function.The weld strengths vary from adequate to terrible. I can't envision these standing up to pets, children or even normal care when moving and cleaning around them, without first gingerly unloading and then reloading them, and even that attempted care might cause breakage. While the lack of weld durability was helpful when using a 4.5 inch cutoff wheel tool to remove the center divider, with one undesired weld accidently, but favorably separating with only slight pressure, an exterior wall weld popped free at the same moment and so needed to be repaired. To keep these frames secure, additional support is required, ranging from additional welding, brazing, building up a thick bead of glue or silicone, adding additional framing or what I elected to use, adding compression to each or the outermost weld joints by binding them tightly using nylon wire ties that were rated for 40 lb loads, and so were narrow enough to thread through the screen holes. You can't bind the welds with nonchalance, or the necessary product reinforcing compression will not be achieved. I used the flat blade of a screwdriver to hold the click stop tensioner housings tight against the screen/frame while using pliers to grip and tighten the loose ends until they couldn't possibly be drawn tighter without breaking them. This I used to repair the one unintentionally broken, and still required, resecured corner, and to keep the other welds from failing during the hopefully long life of my intended speaker protection use.The foreboding curse of the weak welds and slightly floppier than preferred overall material gauge was equally helpful when overcoming the most recessed center divider weld, as, after slicing through the other two welds with the cutoff tool, I only needed to bend the divider back and forth several times to force it to separate from the rest of the frame. If I could not have flopped it about, like a loose non-permanent tooth in a child's mouth, I'd have notched the frame with the cutoff tool to make the divider separate.A great variety of other fabrication tools could have been employed toward center divider removal, and surface cleanup, but as the cutoff tool was already selected/in hand, I used its outer edge to also grind leftover material smooth, then I repainted wherever I'd exposed bare metal. If your wire ties aren't already black, you can paint those too.My speakers lower easily into place, leaving a bit more than 1/4 inch clearance on either side, While these racks are 10 x10 inch, and my speakers are only 7.5 inches deep, the extra wire rack depth assures that there is always adequate airflow clearance for the rear firing bass ports. 5/5 stars once completed.Not the most elegant solution, just happened to be a properly sized one, and when I started shopping wireframe furnishings, I instead expected to find a preconstructed shelf pair, I could remove from a larger assembly, bend into L-shapes, looking like a pair of matched bookends, and slip beneath my speaker isolation pads to hold them in place.While these match my speaker color, and the construction of the wire rack I was already using on my desk to store office supplies and equipment remote controls, I'd never try to make these, minus heavy reinforcement, work with magazines or tall, thin books. They'll break, might even come already broken and would earn a 0/5, in my own best estimation, for that.
K**E
Works great.
These work great for what I needed. They are light so they did tip over. I zip tied them together and no more tipping.
R**C
Very nice!
I just received my magazine holders and am very pleased with how good they look. When I submitted my order, I was not sure I'd I would be getting one unit or two because there are two slots in each unit. I am happy to say that I received TWO units, each one had two slots. Also, they came with a small mesh pencil holder basket that can hook onto the side of one of the units. These will be great to hold my craft magazines and the pencil basket will be perfect for my craft cart.
M**I
Quality
Liked quality
T**R
Stable and Lightweight
Metal is usually quite sturdy and framework is substantial.
R**N
Perfect for organizing card stock and scrapbook paper
I’m reorganizing my crop room. I’m using these to help with my solid card stock and printed papers. Makes it much easier to find the colors I want and to save space.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
2 weeks ago