Well here is what was finished today;
Built the base unit with some 1x6 on the bottom of the base to reinforce the coasters. Found a couple pieces of scrap lumber at Home Depot with a 3/4" route cut in them (used for banding) for a cost of 0.51 each, they are a god sent, will be using them for a couple things first off it went over the back coaster bolts so I could set the back brace. Saved us setting up 2x4s for the same route cut.
![Image](http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2826/10880274396_d932bf840d_z_d.jpg)
![Image](http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7362/10880546583_0cbb5ebbdf_z_d.jpg)
Using that same "scrap" as the base for my monitor board. I have already mounted the arm assembly to the plywood and here you will see it resting in the scrap board (it hasn't been for cut yet). I got the monitor arm mount at a Ross for $9.99 , its perfect. This mount will allow me to build this unit sturdy with upgrade ability latter down the road. I stuck with the 19" due to it being the biggest square but if latter I want to put a larger unit in there I can adjust for it.
![Image](http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7376/10880383984_e1b940599e_z_d.jpg)
![Image](http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3746/10880236835_332f3e34b2_z_d.jpg)
Well outside all that everything else is cut to fit, just not fitted yet. Final adjustments and a few more design on the fly decisions were made. Oh and I made a total disaster out of my garage
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_e_smile.gif)
![Image](http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2880/10880237735_cb8ae022a0_z_d.jpg)
![Image](http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2886/10880238135_336b9580d9_z_d.jpg)
Well with that, the one thing I did 100% right is chose Plywood over MDF. My father being almost 80 came from an era where safety was pulling your fingers out of the cutting path of a saw just before it would cut your fingers off, back then saw safety was taught by 3 finger Frank and the entire lesson was him waving at you. I doubt I would get him to wear a safety mask or goggles, men don't do those kind of things.
![Mad :chainsaw:](./images/smilies/chainsaw.gif)
Its all good and I'm learning things. Never hurts to listen to someone who had to cut their own lumber from a forest to build a house at the age of 8. He may not be able to teach a safety class but he can still teach me a thing or two about cutting a good straight line ( and how to use a sander to fix the F-ups).
Post more tomorrow!