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Reviewed in the United States on March 3, 2025
I love this roll around TV Stand. My husband uses it in the kitchen and then i will use it in my office. So when i told him i was talking into my work office he said i had to get another one for the house. So i bought another one. You have to plug it in somewhere since it is not wireless.
Customer
Reviewed in Mexico on February 3, 2025
Voy a comprar otro, no es común algo tan bien hecho.Hagan escritorios y brazos para monitor.Instrucciones claras, y bien empacado.
Doug A
Reviewed in the United States on February 17, 2025
Easy to assemble. Stable, tall, looks nice. Can easily rotate monitor from landscape to portrait with one hand, no tools. Can adjust to any height, but requires a wrench. Glad I added the keyboard tray too. I removed the wheels to make it a bit more stable on the carpet floor.
BMA
Reviewed in the United States on August 21, 2024
It does the job. It wobbles a little, but that's expected. It works great with my 55-inch TV, and the tray is amazing for keeping other devices close and organized. You can hide the cables inside the base, so it looks neat, and I can easily move my TV to any room.
Jackie
Reviewed in the United States on July 28, 2024
The media could not be loaded.
MrsPebbles
Reviewed in the United States on June 17, 2024
This was easy to assemble as far as I got (basically the pole on base with wheels). I ordered it to hold a tv in a nursing home, but it turned out to not be needed, so I never finished. It seems very sturdy and rolls very easiy. I just never got to the point of mounting a screen.
Sharonda
Reviewed in the United States on November 18, 2024
Works as described. The instructions made sense and I do recommend. It does take some time to put it together but it is worth it.
Jim Rodriguez
Reviewed in the United States on January 9, 2024
Easy to assemble, but just take your time.
Nortan Thalem
Reviewed in the United States on August 7, 2023
This arrives well packed in a fairly compact box. All of the components are somewhat padded and protected with plastic to prevent scratched paint.There is a LOT of assembly here, mostly because the stand comes in quite a few parts in order to shrink it down for shipping. If you are a business and need to order a few of these, they wont take up very much space while waiting for assembly, but it could be anywhere between 20-60 minutes to assemble depending on the person. It comes with most of the tools you need for assembly, (a full sized wrench and two alan wrenches), but you may need a philips screwdriver if you need to attach the extension arms to mount TVs with wider VESA holes.Each leg is about 5 parts to assemble, not counting the base they screw into. They probably could have been engineered to need fewer parts, but I think these are designed so you can order replacements if a screw plate gets stripped or something. You may want to occasionally check and tighten the alan screws on the legs, and thankfully you can just pull up the plastic cover to access them. I THINK if a leg gets loose, it should be visually evident and cause it to wobble or lean long before it can fall over and hurt someone.The table is all metal, though a little thin. It seems more than sturdy and wide enough to hold most game consoles and video players. Heavier gaming computers could be an issue though. It has a slight ledge on the back to help keep things from sliding backwards off of it, but the front and sides do not have anything, so be aware if your equipment doesn't have good rubberized feet. There is a tiny hole on the middle of the edge on both the left and right side of the table, I suspect they are for a an anchoring cable to screw down.The table screws into place and unfortunately does not have and screw holes to attach it higher up on the pole than about three inches under the silver ring that connects the two halves of the poles together. This is my first major issue with the design. I'm 6 feet tall, and my fingers can just barely touch the table without bending down. If it could go even a few inches to a foot higher, it would be the perfect height to do some quick typing on a keyboard and mouse while standing. The table is wide enough to accommodate a 60% keyboard and mouse, and still have room for compact business PCs to sit behind it on the shelf. It's too wobbly to replace a podium or standing desk designed for frequent use/typing, but would do for quick menu updates if your using a mini computer to run data on the screen. As it is, I'd have to grab a chair to type on this table. To be fair, this is probably intended as a shelf for video equipment, which it is sufficient for. It could probably use a few more holes along the back of the table for zip tying cables, power strips, etc with.The VESA mount seems to work great and can adjust to various heights, but I'm not too happy with the mechanism for locking it on the pole. One of the few plastic parts has to be carefully slid into the back of the mount arm as you insert it on the pole, otherwise it tends to fall out. It is then locked into place by using an alan wrench on a tiny metal screw that pushes the plastic against the pole. I worry that this screw could put enough pressure on the plastic to gouge or split it, I would rather this part was metal with a rubber insert, or that the end of the screw that contacted the plastic was wider to spread the force out from the one tiny point. Ill admit it seems to do the job and the mound is holding up a 43'inch TV just fine.I needed to use the extension arms in order to get my TV onto the VESA mount. While the rest of the instructions are pretty clear, it doesn't instruct you very well on how to assemble the extensions, and it only has one screw/nut for each arm. It really seems like it needs a second screw per each arm to lock the arm extension in place and reinforce it. It has plenty of screws and spacers to fit a variety of TVs and monitors, but it doesn't have anything to better secure the mount for the larger, presumably heavier TVs? I also feel like the screw should lock in place in the extension mount hole so you don't have to hold it with a philips screwdriver while tightening it with a wrench. This also has to be done before attaching it to the TV, and if it comes loose over time, requires taking the TV off the mount to access and tighten it again. Despite my best attempts to tighten it, the TV makes the extensions sag when in portrait orientation. Ill have to find some screws or something at my local hardware store to reinforce this. It's possible that I'm just using the VESA extensions wrong, but if I am it's because it lacks the details on how to properly assemble the extensions.Complaints aside, I really like the rolling stand. 95% metal, cable routing though the pole and rubber/plastic caps to help keep the cables from scraping on metal ages. The TV can be rotated to landscape/portrait position either for vertical display, art applications or simply for storage. It certainly makes it easier to roll wide monitors through a door or put it somewhere out of the way in my cramped room. It would be nice if there was a dedicated handle to control it over carpet better, I find myself tempted to push on the somewhat flimsy table for better control. I would also have liked to see storage slots for the wrenches so you don't have to jury rig something to keep them out of sight but accessible for adjustments. I feel pretty confident pushing/pulling on this stand without worry it will tip over. It just feels like a few small changes could make it so much better.
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