Calculator
Formula used
This calculator targets a neutral wrist position by placing the key-top height slightly below the elbow height.
- Elbow height: measured value, or estimated using posture.
- Estimated elbow height: standing ≈ 0.60 × stature; sitting ≈ seat height + 0.30 × stature.
- Key-top height: elbow height − forearm drop.
- Effective add-on: keyboard thickness + pad thickness + small tilt lift.
- Support surface: key-top height − effective add-on.
- Desk surface: equals support surface (desk) or support surface + tray drop (tray).
Estimates are practical starting points for garden benches and outdoor office corners. Fine-tune by comfort, wrist neutrality, and shoulder relaxation.
How to use this calculator
- Pick your units and posture.
- If possible, measure elbow height from the floor.
- If sitting without a measurement, add your seat height.
- Enter keyboard thickness and any pad or mat thickness.
- Select desk or tray support, then set tray drop if needed.
- Press Calculate and adjust your setup within the shown range.
Example data table
| Scenario | Posture | Stature | Elbow height | Support | Key-top height | Desk surface |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Potting bench corner | Sitting | 172 cm | 104 cm (measured) | Desk | 102 cm | 98.5 cm |
| Standing garden workstation | Standing | 180 cm | 108 cm (estimated) | Desk | 106 cm | 102.4 cm |
| Small shed desk with tray | Sitting | 165 cm | 94 cm (estimated) | Tray | 92 cm | 97.7 cm |
Examples assume 2 cm forearm drop, 3 cm keyboard thickness, 0.5 cm pad, and mild tilt.
Workspace height targets for garden tasks
Garden workstations often switch between note taking, labeling seedlings, and quick inventory checks. A consistent keyboard height reduces shoulder lift and keeps wrists straighter. This calculator sets the key-top slightly below elbow height, supporting relaxed forearms while you type, log plant data, or control irrigation timers.
Using elbow height as the reference point
Elbow height is the most stable ergonomic reference because it reflects your posture on that day, not just a generic desk standard. If you can measure floor-to-elbow while your shoulders are down and elbows are near 90 degrees, the recommendation becomes very specific. When you cannot measure, the estimator uses standing and seated proportions to provide a practical starting range.
Accounting for keyboard thickness, pads, and tilt
Outdoor and shed setups often include waterproof mats or anti-slip pads. These layers raise the key-top above the support surface, so the calculator subtracts thickness and pad height to keep the key-top aligned with your target. A mild tilt can change the average key-top height by a small amount, which is modeled as a conservative lift so the result stays usable across common garden desk angles.
Desk versus tray planning in compact spaces
Many garden offices use narrow tables, folding benches, or converted shelves. A tray can improve clearance for knees and tool bins, but it also changes where the desk surface should land. By separating tray drop from desk thickness, the calculator shows a desk surface target and an underside clearance target. This helps you choose hardware that fits drawers, cable routes, and storage hooks.
Interpreting the adjustment range for comfort
Small height changes can matter more than you expect when you type in bursts while wearing gloves or moving between tasks. The recommended adjustment range provides a window for personal comfort and different footwear. Start at the suggested key-top height, then test for 5 to 10 minutes. If shoulders rise, lower the setup; if wrists bend upward, raise the support surface slightly.
FAQs
1) Should I measure elbow height with shoes on?
Use whatever you normally wear in your garden workspace. Shoes or boots can add height and change elbow position. If you switch between barefoot and shoes, calculate both and keep the keyboard within the shown adjustment range.
2) What forearm drop value is most common?
Many people feel comfortable with 1 to 3 cm below elbow height. Start near 2 cm for a neutral wrist. If you feel pressure at the wrist heel, reduce the drop; if shoulders tense, increase it slightly.
3) Why does keyboard thickness affect the desk height?
Thickness is the distance from the support surface to the key-top area. A thicker keyboard sits higher, so the desk or tray must be lower to keep key-top height consistent. Pads and mats add to this effect.
4) Can I use this for a potting bench keyboard shelf?
Yes. Select desk support if the keyboard rests directly on the shelf, or tray support if the shelf is mounted below another surface. Measure the shelf height from the floor and compare it to the recommended support surface height.
5) What if my wrists still feel bent after adjusting?
Check chair height, foot support, and how far the keyboard is from your body. If you reach forward, wrists often extend. Pull the keyboard closer, keep elbows near your sides, and re-check the target key-top height.
6) Does the calculator replace professional ergonomic advice?
No. It provides a practical guideline for common garden workstation setups. If you have pain, numbness, or prior injury, consult a qualified professional. Use the calculator results as a starting point for discussion and safer adjustments.