Corner Ryzer Overview & Configuration Guide
The Corner Ryzer is an L-shaped standing desk that uses two frames and four motors to support dual tabletops. This article covers configuration options, orientation selection, and everything to know before ordering.
What Is the Corner Ryzer?
The Corner Ryzer connects two desk frames at a 90° angle to create an L-shaped workstation. It's ideal for users who need two large work surfaces — one for primary monitor use and one for secondary tasks, a second monitor array, or reference materials.
Four motors drive the system (two per frame), and they all sync together so both surfaces rise and fall as one unit.
Key Specifications
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Motors | 4 (two per frame, fully synced) |
| Height Range | 24.4″ – 49.9″ |
| Weight Capacity | 330 lbs total |
| Tabletop Depth Range | 18″ – 48″ per surface |
| Orientation | Left-hand or right-hand (choose at order) |
| Control | Single RT-11 handset controls both frames |
| Anti-collision | Yes — adjustable sensitivity |
Left-Hand vs Right-Hand Orientation
Orientation refers to which side the secondary surface extends from when you're seated at the desk. Standing in front of your primary surface:
- Left-hand:the secondary frame extends to your left
- Right-hand:the secondary frame extends to your right
⚠️ Choose before you order. Orientation is built into the frame assembly and cannot be changed after purchase. Map out your room layout and decide which side works for your space.
Can the Corner Ryzer Be Used as a Single Desk?
No. The control box is designed to drive four legs simultaneously. If only one frame is connected, the control box detects missing leg signals and triggers an error code — the desk will not operate. Both frames must be assembled and connected for the system to function.
Tabletop Sizing for the Corner Ryzer
Each of the two surfaces on a Corner Ryzer can accommodate tabletops with a depth between 18″ and 48″. Progressive Desk sells tabletops in configurations designed for the Corner Ryzer — check the product page for compatible pairs. Custom tabletop orders (minimum 30 units) are also available.
Corner Ryzer Assembly — Two-Tabletop Configuration
Step 1 — Confirm Orientation Before You Start
Before opening any hardware, decide which orientation you want — left-hand or right-hand. Stand in front of where your primary surface will be. The secondary surface extends to your left (left-hand) or your right (right-hand). You cannot change this after assembly.
Step 2 — Assemble the Primary Frame
Assemble the primary (larger) frame first using the same steps as the Solo Ryzer assembly: legs, crossbeam, tabletop attachment. Do not plug in yet.
Step 3 — Assemble the Secondary Frame
Assemble the secondary frame the same way. The secondary frame is shorter in some configurations — verify which is which using the assembly manual labelling (Primary / Secondary).
Step 4 — Join the Two Frames
1. Position both frames at 90°: Arrange the frames in your intended L-shape layout on the floor, face-down. The inner corners of the two tabletops should meet at a 90° angle.
2. Attach the corner bracket: Use the corner joining bracket to connect the inner-corner legs of both frames. Bolt through both leg brackets. This is the structural joint of the L-shape.
3. Tighten all four frame corners: With both frames joined, go back and verify all crossbeam bolts on both frames are fully tightened before flipping upright.
Step 5 — Connect Cables (Four-Leg System)
The Corner Ryzer uses a single control box that drives all four legs. Connect the leg cables from both frames to the control box — each port is labelled (Leg 1, Leg 2, Leg 3, Leg 4). The handset plugs into the HS port as normal.
Step 6 — Flip Upright and Initialize
With two people (ideally three for the Corner Ryzer), flip the assembled unit upright. Position it in its final location, then plug in. The handset will show RST. Hold DOWN until both frames fully lower and the system initializes. Test all four preset positions before final levelling adjustment.