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Your cart is empty.Foldable guitar display stand can hold acoustic, electric and bass guitars. With its high quality padded tubing, your guitars are sure to be protected from attrition. It can be folded down for easy storage and easy transport. This well designed stand will be perfect solution for any guitarist wanting to display their instruments and make them easily accessible. It also works perfect for displaying items for your store.
Bruce
Reviewed in the United States on October 7, 2024
It's pretty easy to assemble and it holds your guitar's securely and looks great. I feel this was a great product at a great price.
Chucker
Reviewed in Canada on November 22, 2021
Sold to me as a nine holder. Gave half price discount when notified it was only a seven guitar holder.
Not_Not_Batman
Reviewed in the United States on March 27, 2019
This rack is incredible for the price. I was able to seat 8 of my 9 (The ninth being a BC Rich Warlock and having a non standard body shape) on this bad boy, and still have room for at least one more electric.Doesn't seem to be road worthy, the construction feels a tad weak, and everything is pretty much hand tight. Even with that being said, this rack works VERY well for my needs.Piecing it together takes only minutes, and while it doesn't come with and decent instructions, they aren't needed. If you have too many guitars (or so my wife tells me) like I do, and you're tired of them sitting in solo stands or against walls, get this. You won't find a better deal.
William
Reviewed in the United States on September 15, 2018
It does hold 9 guitars securely - however remember that acoustics and some semi-hollows may be too wide to fit in a single slot. Personally I only have 1 acoustic in the rack and I have it on the end so it still holds 9 guitars in total: 1 acoustic, 2 bass, and 6 electrics. And it takes far less space than individual stands. It's not high enough quality that I could fully trust it to be reliable in a gig. But for home/studio use where it's not going to be abused, it's perfect. And honestly you can't expect it to be comparable to the other stands on the market that are more expensive (and none of the others hold 9).It would have been 4 stars... but as long as this product stays affordable (I spent $39 USD), the sheer value for your bucks is A++. Just consider other options if you intend to gig with it.
Bikergordy
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 6, 2018
After my wife complained for the umpteenth time about too many guitars being "strewn" (blinkin' cheek!) around the house, including several in the lounge which she sarcastically described as an "art installation", I realised that I had to do something to restore a degree of household harmony. This rack for nine guitars seemed like a good start and it arrived the day after I ordered it. It's simple to put together quickly and without any tools. It comes with pictorial instructions so even a bass player could do it. It seems to be robust enough for home use and it even folds up (down?) easily, not that I'm likely to need to do that any time soon. But up to nine guitars? Yes, if you have just electrics, and probably, if you have a minxture of acoustics and electrics and stored them alternately. But if you have just acoustics, realistically you could only store seven. So, would I buy another one? Yes, it's good value for money and does the job. Buy one - you're unlikely to be disappointed.
Fernand Ray
Reviewed in the United States on November 2, 2017
I wanna ask you a question. What is short-term aggravation worth? You're given a choice: pay more for less of it, or pay less for more. In an hour or so, it will be over, and you'll appreciate that this is a clever design. It uses the minimum of steel to do the job - quite well.There's one area they should consider: contracting with a Chinese sweatshop that gives a damn about drilling and tapping. Don't bother consulting the "instructions"; they make no sense except as a comical parts list. You will enjoy several ways of assembling it bass-ackwards, and in the end will settle on one. The holes are, well, holes. And they have been punched and pro-forma tapped. But if only they bothered running a bolt through them, de-burring them, that sort of thing, you wouldn't curse so much when the cross-stumps go in crooked and you're not sure if you should just push on to the death, or withdraw, coitus interruptus style, and start over.This gets annoying enough that I suggest taking a variable speed drill, loosely chucking in one of the 10 guitar separation stumps minus its foam rubber covering, and slowly and CAREFULLY running it into the holes at a right angle in both planes to the cross-bar to ensure the threading is good enough that you can then screw these 10 pieces in, without the end-product looking like a dried out Christmas tree in mid-January. So, you see, I just saved YOU a half hour of teeth grinding and agitation. If only I'd thought of it sooner.In the end this is another "useful object" to encumber your life and space with. Great deal, actually, unless you're into sitting around and admiring the very last pieces of Madagascar jungle tastefully holding your $99 Squier strats. It's mostly invisible. It holds 9 electric (flat) instruments, comfortably, provided you love them enough not to just toss them in and scratch one against the other. That rubbery covering is possibly as safe on most finishes as all the others'. You can [EDIT] MUST [/EDIT] add some of that blue paper masking tape where nitro-finished instruments make contact.It's not herculean but not flimsy either. Unless you want to strip the bolts, don't bother trying to make it fully rigid, you can't. And you want a touch of flex in case of earthquake. If you put some gliders on the "feet", you can gently slide it around, fully loaded. Whee! It's better than that scarecrows in vacant lot look of 9 individual guitar stands. It folds pretty flat and stows if you get tired of it. I can't think of other uses for it that can be discussed in public without being accused of animal cruelty.
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