Bought the Jaspers 3D-145B, killer stand. As a former production machinist I appreciated the finish details like chamfered end pieces, square stock for keyboard supports rather than flat. Cost a bit less ordered from Thomann UK even with the shipping than a quality stand from the USA. Nothing comes close for quality plus price. Carries my 64 lb. Montage8 just fine.
Haha, hey man - copying each other again. I'm the one with the two (actually three) Synapse from your other (great) videos. In fact, I finally got around to connecting two of them together with the cable you linked from Amazon and it works great. I also just purchased, received and put up my first Jasper stand about 2 weeks ago too. I bought the KR200-6-120RB from Thomann. A bit more expensive but for me, the wheels were worth it so I can roll it away from the wall and service all synths/cables with ease. Looks like you can just walk behind yours easily so no worries there. I completely agree, the Jaspers are the only solution for large reliable stands. Built like tanks. Completely secure. Thomann got mine to me in just a couple days (to the U.S.). Great video and I highly concur with your assessment.
Ha! Creative minds think alike, I guess. That 6 tier version looks killer. Is it suiting your setup? Rollers seem like the way to go for maximum flexibility. My 5-tier has made my space so much more, uh... spacious. Game-changer for me. Glad to hear the Synapse cabling worked out well. I love the fact that one Synapse can power the other unit. Downside: I seem to be obsessed with filling all 40 outputs on the router pair. Appreciate the feedback and participation in the discussion.
Great review! One correction though, these stands were originally engineered and manufactured in America not Germany under the name Ultimate Support Stands in the 1980's. After the patents ran out Jasper and On Stage began making them although the On Stage are not the same quality as the Ultimate or Jasper. I still have my 80's Ultimate stand.
I'm considering one of these rack systems. I already have a similar system holding both my acoustic and electronic drum kits up, and have never questioned the necessity. I'm not really questioning it for my synths either... well, I am a little bit. The cost, for all the components I need, is close to a DeepMind 12, so I'm just holding back pressing the button for now. It's Friday right now so I absolutely know come about 11pm, while I'm poring over the Jaspers secrion on the Thomann website, that button will get pressed.
Thanks for the great video! Nice to see a fellow K3 owner too! (I have 7 and 12 K3m's here) Its refreshign to see people using good stands these days in an era where people put expensive synths on crappy wobbly folding arm stands. Jaspers along with many others copied Ultimate Support Systems stands and parts from the 1970's-1980's, Some poorly, some just as good. All of the parts are based on 1.5 inch OD thin wall aluminum tubing. Yamaha, Roland, World Tour all made great quality clones while companies like On Stage made not so great clones. Jaspers are great, are a bit expensive but unless you move up to the super heavy duty drum cage stuff (Gibralter, Pearl, etc) which have t-fittings and clamps made from metal and cost $0 per clamp or more, they are the only company making the 1.5" format stands/parts in good quality nowdays. the original USS parts are still, to this day, the strongest and can hold the most weight, I have had a Fender Rhodes 88 stage piano on a USS stand before as well as a Yamaha CS80 (220lbs) , Even added standard wall 1.5" tubes instead of the normal thin wall tubes, to the back of a tall stand so I could climb the back of the stand during live performance and play the top synth from behind for the audience. (stage antics! lol) USS stands and parts are all over ebay, reverb etc... Love the jaspers and that people today can still get a good stand but for those who need more than 3 Tiers or multiple stands or simply cannot afford a new jaspers stand should check out ebay, reverb, craigslist, etc for used USS stands, even if incomplete, they are giant tinkertopys and can be combind and built into whatever configuration you need. I loved seeing the part of your video with the K3 and the rear tube holding the back of the Tiers, thats a trick Ive done for years on heavy synths and synths that are deep like the DX1, OB-Xa, Triton Extreme88, and SX-400. It was intersting to see the Jaspers weight limits there, somthing I didnt know. BTW, my DX1 weighs 112;bs! and the CS80 is 220;bs! One of my favorite things about Jaspers, USS, Yamaha, roland and the other good clones is that they are all pretty much compatible with each other with USS holding the record for the most innovative parts / accessories. USS made rack mount rils for thier stands, 300 pound casters, adjsutable angle clamps, Tiers of all legnths, t fittings and the list goes on. I even use USS speaker mounts as wall mouonts so can use the same stand parts for lighting rigs in my studio. I have over 60+ synths on my USS stands in my studio with most of them being vintage, valuable, and a few that are super rare including my Yamaha DX1. Anyone needing a synth stand(s) should not risk an expensive piece of gear on the stupid wobbly foldable arm stands. I would never trust a cheap or wobbly stand. Thanks for posting a video on the Jaspers!! i only posted this long rant in hopes the other Synthissists, keys players will protect thier expensive gear from falls and drops and invest wisely in a good stand... ive seen it too many times where a synth falls or drops and ends up damaged and broken, I ahve personally seen a Memorymoog fall as well as others. Not a good thing for a $13,000 synth!
Thanks for the feedback on the video, Mystic Frequencies. I was so impressed with the Jaspers stand I had to share the experience. I agree: putting well-loved and/or expensive instruments on shaky stands is an inevitable disaster. As much as I love repairing old synths, I'd rather not be the one damaging them. (I do seem to "bond" with my gear after I replace parts and solder some guts.... then it's next to impossible to ever sell those instruments.) I didn't know that USS, Roland, & Yammy made 1.5" OD systems. I will be scouring eBay and Reverb for parts to create my next stand system. It's always fun to design and build a custom set. Huge fan of the K3. Looking for a K3m to double my polyphony. I even bought a service manual for a K3m in anticipation of buying one in need of repair. Ha! Appreciate your participation in the conversation!
Great review. I'm wondering how far off the ground the lowest shelf is? It looks like maybe a bit too low - do you find that it's easy/comfortable to access that shelf when producing? I'm kind of in between the 4 or the 5 tier shelf.
The lowest shelf is about 13" from the floor on my set up; certainly not useful for keyboard performances and not particularly comfortable unless you're sitting on the floor. That tier holds seldom-used controllers and effects boxes that don't rack-up easily. You can always add a bar later, but its ultimately cheaper to buy the 5-tier unit and not use the 5th bar until you need it. Glad the review helped out. I tried to answer questions I had before I bought the Jaspers, but couldn't find online anywhere.
Stupid question. Looking at the accessories, I see "monitor stands" that attach to the tubes. When they say "monitor", do they mean a speaker or a computer monitor? I have a couple yamaha monitor speakers that would be good to mount to this, assuming it is designed to hold the weight.
Great reviews! From the video it looks like the back vertical legs are not angled at all, making this shape |\ instead of /\. Is that adjustable? The max depth listed on the Jaspers website is 70cm, I assume that results in a /\ shape? And then you can adjust it to be less deep? If so, how narrow can you get it? Does that result in a |\ shape, or can you still maintain the A shape, but make it taller? Thanks!
Thanks for the compliment. Indeed the rack (as assembled per factory instructions) is more upright --- perfectly vertical on the rear legs. As best as I can tell this is not adjustable, as the bottom support reins in the angle. The top of the rack is hinged, so you COULD replace the bottom support tube with something longer to achieve an overall "A" angle. I'm not sure you can go much more narrow than 70cm and still have the rack be stable. I've not tried these things, so I can only speculate. Hope that helps.
@@vintageMIDI Thanks! I was looking for a 4D-120B, and I didn't notice the 5D has this horizontal support bare at the bottom, which indeed makes it fixed into a |\ shape. I think (hope) the 4D can be adjusted like I describe :)
got one of those finally last night after they shipped the wrong one; then when assembled, it wobbles....I will have to try to take it apart and see if I missed anything but I am pretty sure I did not.
Sorry to hear. Recently move this stand to a new location and got a wobble. Turns out my floor was not level where I placed this stand. Had to use some shims to make it rock solid again. Hope you find a solution to your assembly concerns.
The MD4s is a remarkable machine. I think it'll be a fun demo to make. Yamaha did some out-of-the-box engineering with that 4-track. It bridged the gap between analog tape and affordable hard disk multi-tracks. Mini-Disc didn't have much time to shine in the light before hard disk D.A.W. became the thing to do.
OK, so for the first twenty seconds of your video, something about the way you talk, I thought it was a text to speech. Haha! But seriously great video. Makes me realize I need one.
Ha! I had to go back and listen to the start of the video. You are correct: I sound fairly robotic there. Sometimes reading from a heavily edited script yields a less than human vibe. 🤖 'Does. Not. Compute.' 🤖 Glad you enjoyed the review, Brinstar, & your participation in the comments is appreciated.
I wonder if with a stabilizer bar on mid tier if my eurorack case would be safe if I just used more than two holder bars or whatever... I just wish the lips/feet were longer/deeper, but... I've heard Jaspers can customize it for you? Maybe they could do deeper ones?
Not sure about the customization FROM Jasper, but there are enough parts and pieces that you could find a way to reinforce the stand to suit you. Check out Thomann's website; they probably list nearly every part Jaspers makes.
Great video. I’m wondering if you used any sort of adhesive tabs or the like to secure the keyboards that are at rather steep angles? I have a couple of synth that don’t have a flat edge on the front and I’m a bit worried about them sliding over the end catch. Any advice would be appreciated.
It's been awhile since I've had the specific setup in the video. Typically, yes, I put rubberized tabs --- like the thin feet found on audio gear, to give a little grip and anti-slip to gravity prone sliding on the Jasper stand. Synths like the Kawai K3, which is weighty, doesn't have a completely flat front. Thin wooden flat sticks (similar to paint stirring sticks, but way longer) placed against the vertical end of the holder acts as a rail to discourage slippage, which can be useful, too. I suppose double-sided tape could be utilized, but I do not want adhesive residue on the gear. Hope that helps, Don. Thanks for posting in the comments.
hey have you ever got the laptop stand or care to make a video where you to explain where the laptop stand would be installed at? I really like the jasper stands because of the ability of the multiple types of arms, it's not one size fit all which most cheap stands have which is also stupid!
I have yet to get the Jaspers laptop stand, but it looks to me as it would anchor on the vertical posts. The following link shows a vertical clamp attached to the laptop stand: www.thomannmusic.com/jaspers_laptop_stand_20b.htm I agree that Jaspers makes a highly versatile system to customize synth and accessory positions to suit most any situation.
I think the width of the frame may be too short for an 88-key instrument. I don't have an 88-key to measure. Seems like they would have a series that may accommodate something that large. www.thomannmusic.com/jaspers_keyboard_stands_keys.html
Can you customize the depth or get deeper support bars to support like... A performance modular case? Mine's like 3.4 inches deep, so the width on these is great, but the bottom lip, especially with tilting... Terrifies me. Cause the performance case has more height with the lid on too, but, also- It feels like fully adjusting it, tightening it and then having like at least an extra support below it/another lip. The thing I'm wondering is if they sell any or commission any that just have deeper lips? Anyone you know put modular setups on this? I'm referring to an intellijel performance 7U case.
I just put together one of the two Jaspers stands I ordered. On the cross bar that holds the arms, there are two clamps, one each on the outer ends of the cross bars, between the keyboard support arm and the frame itself...... Can you, or one of your viewers explain or comment on its use... Is there and extra piece of hardware to be used with this clamp to make for a more stable mount??? Thanks in advance. Synth on....
I think you are referring to these: www.thomannmusic.com/jaspers_tube_clamp_without_strap.htm The notch locks into a receptor on the end pieces so that the crossbar does not rotate, ensuring the bar won't tip when a synth is mounted. Let me know if that helps.
@@vintageMIDI Just got home, looked at those clamps.. Awesome... I did not know that this was part of the purchase of this stand, the KR 170-4-150 in black. This really does hold the angle of the keyboard arms from rotating from the weight of the keyboard.
Thanks for the detailed review. Jaspers have been around forever, and there’s not enough reviews like this one. Much appreciated!
Thanks caseTelevision; glad the video was helpful. Jaspers nails it and I'm diggin' the results.
Great video...there's nothing like questioning an unfancy purchase only to have it be an essential component that elevates your fancy equipment.
Thanks Christopher. I may be obsessed with organization. And making videos.
Bought the Jaspers 3D-145B, killer stand. As a former production machinist I appreciated the finish details like chamfered end pieces, square stock for keyboard supports rather than flat. Cost a bit less ordered from Thomann UK even with the shipping than a quality stand from the USA. Nothing comes close for quality plus price. Carries my 64 lb. Montage8 just fine.
Fine craftsmanship is always worth the extra scratch; glad you're lovin' the Jasper gear
Is it possible to set the lowest tiers in a way that the synths knobs are not fully covered by the upper synths?
I have this same conundrum right now. Thanks for the thorough review.
Hope it helped weight out the options for you, Ri. Thanks for participating in the comments on this video.
Haha, hey man - copying each other again. I'm the one with the two (actually three) Synapse from your other (great) videos. In fact, I finally got around to connecting two of them together with the cable you linked from Amazon and it works great. I also just purchased, received and put up my first Jasper stand about 2 weeks ago too. I bought the KR200-6-120RB from Thomann. A bit more expensive but for me, the wheels were worth it so I can roll it away from the wall and service all synths/cables with ease. Looks like you can just walk behind yours easily so no worries there. I completely agree, the Jaspers are the only solution for large reliable stands. Built like tanks. Completely secure. Thomann got mine to me in just a couple days (to the U.S.). Great video and I highly concur with your assessment.
Ha! Creative minds think alike, I guess.
That 6 tier version looks killer. Is it suiting your setup? Rollers seem like the way to go for maximum flexibility.
My 5-tier has made my space so much more, uh... spacious. Game-changer for me.
Glad to hear the Synapse cabling worked out well. I love the fact that one Synapse can power the other unit. Downside: I seem to be obsessed with filling all 40 outputs on the router pair.
Appreciate the feedback and participation in the discussion.
Love the great fade of covered equipment to uncovered
Cross-dissolves are like magic.
Great review! One correction though, these stands were originally engineered and manufactured in America not Germany under the name Ultimate Support Stands in the 1980's. After the patents ran out Jasper and On Stage began making them although the On Stage are not the same quality as the Ultimate or Jasper. I still have my 80's Ultimate stand.
Yeah ultimate are shite
I'm considering one of these rack systems. I already have a similar system holding both my acoustic and electronic drum kits up, and have never questioned the necessity. I'm not really questioning it for my synths either... well, I am a little bit. The cost, for all the components I need, is close to a DeepMind 12, so I'm just holding back pressing the button for now. It's Friday right now so I absolutely know come about 11pm, while I'm poring over the Jaspers secrion on the Thomann website, that button will get pressed.
Thanks for the great video! Nice to see a fellow K3 owner too! (I have 7 and 12 K3m's here) Its refreshign to see people using good stands these days in an era where people put expensive synths on crappy wobbly folding arm stands. Jaspers along with many others copied Ultimate Support Systems stands and parts from the 1970's-1980's, Some poorly, some just as good. All of the parts are based on 1.5 inch OD thin wall aluminum tubing. Yamaha, Roland, World Tour all made great quality clones while companies like On Stage made not so great clones. Jaspers are great, are a bit expensive but unless you move up to the super heavy duty drum cage stuff (Gibralter, Pearl, etc) which have t-fittings and clamps made from metal and cost $0 per clamp or more, they are the only company making the 1.5" format stands/parts in good quality nowdays. the original USS parts are still, to this day, the strongest and can hold the most weight, I have had a Fender Rhodes 88 stage piano on a USS stand before as well as a Yamaha CS80 (220lbs) , Even added standard wall 1.5" tubes instead of the normal thin wall tubes, to the back of a tall stand so I could climb the back of the stand during live performance and play the top synth from behind for the audience. (stage antics! lol)
USS stands and parts are all over ebay, reverb etc... Love the jaspers and that people today can still get a good stand but for those who need more than 3 Tiers or multiple stands or simply cannot afford a new jaspers stand should check out ebay, reverb, craigslist, etc for used USS stands, even if incomplete, they are giant tinkertopys and can be combind and built into whatever configuration you need. I loved seeing the part of your video with the K3 and the rear tube holding the back of the Tiers, thats a trick Ive done for years on heavy synths and synths that are deep like the DX1, OB-Xa, Triton Extreme88, and SX-400. It was intersting to see the Jaspers weight limits there, somthing I didnt know. BTW, my DX1 weighs 112;bs! and the CS80 is 220;bs! One of my favorite things about Jaspers, USS, Yamaha, roland and the other good clones is that they are all pretty much compatible with each other with USS holding the record for the most innovative parts / accessories. USS made rack mount rils for thier stands, 300 pound casters, adjsutable angle clamps, Tiers of all legnths, t fittings and the list goes on. I even use USS speaker mounts as wall mouonts so can use the same stand parts for lighting rigs in my studio.
I have over 60+ synths on my USS stands in my studio with most of them being vintage, valuable, and a few that are super rare including my Yamaha DX1. Anyone needing a synth stand(s) should not risk an expensive piece of gear on the stupid wobbly foldable arm stands. I would never trust a cheap or wobbly stand. Thanks for posting a video on the Jaspers!! i only posted this long rant in hopes the other Synthissists, keys players will protect thier expensive gear from falls and drops and invest wisely in a good stand... ive seen it too many times where a synth falls or drops and ends up damaged and broken, I ahve personally seen a Memorymoog fall as well as others. Not a good thing for a $13,000 synth!
Thanks for the feedback on the video, Mystic Frequencies. I was so impressed with the Jaspers stand I had to share the experience.
I agree: putting well-loved and/or expensive instruments on shaky stands is an inevitable disaster. As much as I love repairing old synths, I'd rather not be the one damaging them. (I do seem to "bond" with my gear after I replace parts and solder some guts.... then it's next to impossible to ever sell those instruments.)
I didn't know that USS, Roland, & Yammy made 1.5" OD systems. I will be scouring eBay and Reverb for parts to create my next stand system. It's always fun to design and build a custom set.
Huge fan of the K3. Looking for a K3m to double my polyphony. I even bought a service manual for a K3m in anticipation of buying one in need of repair. Ha!
Appreciate your participation in the conversation!
thank you! i love my new jaspers stand, too.
cheers from germany
Any time I see an UltraProteus / Morpheus in a setup, I approve of everything.
E-mu put the -eus in Syntheus. Can't synth without 'em.
Great review. I'm wondering how far off the ground the lowest shelf is? It looks like maybe a bit too low - do you find that it's easy/comfortable to access that shelf when producing? I'm kind of in between the 4 or the 5 tier shelf.
The lowest shelf is about 13" from the floor on my set up; certainly not useful for keyboard performances and not particularly comfortable unless you're sitting on the floor. That tier holds seldom-used controllers and effects boxes that don't rack-up easily.
You can always add a bar later, but its ultimately cheaper to buy the 5-tier unit and not use the 5th bar until you need it.
Glad the review helped out. I tried to answer questions I had before I bought the Jaspers, but couldn't find online anywhere.
Love the Jaspers stuff!
Agreed; worthy investment.
Stupid question. Looking at the accessories, I see "monitor stands" that attach to the tubes. When they say "monitor", do they mean a speaker or a computer monitor? I have a couple yamaha monitor speakers that would be good to mount to this, assuming it is designed to hold the weight.
Great reviews! From the video it looks like the back vertical legs are not angled at all, making this shape |\ instead of /\. Is that adjustable? The max depth listed on the Jaspers website is 70cm, I assume that results in a /\ shape? And then you can adjust it to be less deep? If so, how narrow can you get it? Does that result in a |\ shape, or can you still maintain the A shape, but make it taller? Thanks!
Thanks for the compliment.
Indeed the rack (as assembled per factory instructions) is more upright --- perfectly vertical on the rear legs.
As best as I can tell this is not adjustable, as the bottom support reins in the angle. The top of the rack is hinged, so you COULD replace the bottom support tube with something longer to achieve an overall "A" angle.
I'm not sure you can go much more narrow than 70cm and still have the rack be stable. I've not tried these things, so I can only speculate. Hope that helps.
@@vintageMIDI Thanks! I was looking for a 4D-120B, and I didn't notice the 5D has this horizontal support bare at the bottom, which indeed makes it fixed into a |\ shape. I think (hope) the 4D can be adjusted like I describe :)
Happy to help; please let me know if you are able to adjust the angle on the 4D series. That would be quite handy in many situations.
I'm literally setting up my jasper 3tier stand now
These is something super satisfying about organizing and securing beloved gear. Enjoy!
5D-120B does this stand fit 76 keys 🎹
What is 130 cm outter W vs 120 cm inner W
got one of those finally last night after they shipped the wrong one; then when assembled, it wobbles....I will have to try to take it apart and see if I missed anything but I am pretty sure I did not.
Sorry to hear. Recently move this stand to a new location and got a wobble. Turns out my floor was not level where I placed this stand. Had to use some shims to make it rock solid again. Hope you find a solution to your assembly concerns.
@@vintageMIDI actually all good I spent a couple days messing and tightening. And adjusting. All good especially once I put stuff up on it
Yo this video is awesome man top class cheers. Helped me make the decision. Peace dude.
Thanks Dylan. Glad it helped make a difference. Rock on!
dig seeing that minidisc multitrack
The MD4s is a remarkable machine. I think it'll be a fun demo to make. Yamaha did some out-of-the-box engineering with that 4-track. It bridged the gap between analog tape and affordable hard disk multi-tracks. Mini-Disc didn't have much time to shine in the light before hard disk D.A.W. became the thing to do.
Thoughtful Clips absolutely. also that pitch down is magic
OK, so for the first twenty seconds of your video, something about the way you talk, I thought it was a text to speech. Haha! But seriously great video. Makes me realize I need one.
Ha! I had to go back and listen to the start of the video.
You are correct: I sound fairly robotic there. Sometimes reading from a heavily edited script yields a less than human vibe.
🤖 'Does. Not. Compute.' 🤖
Glad you enjoyed the review, Brinstar, & your participation in the comments is appreciated.
I wonder if with a stabilizer bar on mid tier if my eurorack case would be safe if I just used more than two holder bars or whatever...
I just wish the lips/feet were longer/deeper, but... I've heard Jaspers can customize it for you? Maybe they could do deeper ones?
Not sure about the customization FROM Jasper, but there are enough parts and pieces that you could find a way to reinforce the stand to suit you. Check out Thomann's website; they probably list nearly every part Jaspers makes.
Great video. I’m wondering if you used any sort of adhesive tabs or the like to secure the keyboards that are at rather steep angles? I have a couple of synth that don’t have a flat edge on the front and I’m a bit worried about them sliding over the end catch. Any advice would be appreciated.
It's been awhile since I've had the specific setup in the video. Typically, yes, I put rubberized tabs --- like the thin feet found on audio gear, to give a little grip and anti-slip to gravity prone sliding on the Jasper stand. Synths like the Kawai K3, which is weighty, doesn't have a completely flat front. Thin wooden flat sticks (similar to paint stirring sticks, but way longer) placed against the vertical end of the holder acts as a rail to discourage slippage, which can be useful, too. I suppose double-sided tape could be utilized, but I do not want adhesive residue on the gear. Hope that helps, Don. Thanks for posting in the comments.
hey have you ever got the laptop stand or care to make a video where you to explain where the laptop stand would be installed at? I really like the jasper stands because of the ability of the multiple types of arms, it's not one size fit all which most cheap stands have which is also stupid!
I have yet to get the Jaspers laptop stand, but it looks to me as it would anchor on the vertical posts. The following link shows a vertical clamp attached to the laptop stand: www.thomannmusic.com/jaspers_laptop_stand_20b.htm
I agree that Jaspers makes a highly versatile system to customize synth and accessory positions to suit most any situation.
Nice review! Can you hold an 88 key keyboard on there? I have a Motif XF. If Not, would a 1 tier stand fit underneath?
I think the width of the frame may be too short for an 88-key instrument. I don't have an 88-key to measure. Seems like they would have a series that may accommodate something that large.
www.thomannmusic.com/jaspers_keyboard_stands_keys.html
Thanks ....Know I want chocolate cake...Thanks for the review
Can you customize the depth or get deeper support bars to support like... A performance modular case?
Mine's like 3.4 inches deep, so the width on these is great, but the bottom lip, especially with tilting... Terrifies me.
Cause the performance case has more height with the lid on too, but, also- It feels like fully adjusting it, tightening it and then having like at least an extra support below it/another lip.
The thing I'm wondering is if they sell any or commission any that just have deeper lips?
Anyone you know put modular setups on this?
I'm referring to an intellijel performance 7U case.
I would try:
www.thomannmusic.com/
I just put together one of the two Jaspers stands I ordered. On the cross bar that holds the arms, there are two clamps, one each on the outer ends of the cross bars, between the keyboard support arm and the frame itself...... Can you, or one of your viewers explain or comment on its use... Is there and extra piece of hardware to be used with this clamp to make for a more stable mount??? Thanks in advance. Synth on....
I think you are referring to these:
www.thomannmusic.com/jaspers_tube_clamp_without_strap.htm
The notch locks into a receptor on the end pieces so that the crossbar does not rotate, ensuring the bar won't tip when a synth is mounted.
Let me know if that helps.
@@vintageMIDI
I am sure you are correct, I will look closely and align the 2 pieces. Thanks a million.
@@vintageMIDI
Just got home, looked at those clamps.. Awesome... I did not know that this was part of the purchase of this stand, the KR 170-4-150 in black. This really does hold the angle of the keyboard arms from rotating from the weight of the keyboard.
@@tommyg5095 Happy to help. Thanks for participating in the comments on this video.
Thanks!
Thank you, Donald.
Hahaha cool, want to purchase this too 😎
These stands are so well built I never worry about my gear.