multi - keyboard stand?

Rob cyborg_0 at iquest.net
Sat Sep 9 19:00:00 CEST 2000


If you are going to do it against a wall, and have it very flush, I suggest
the wire shelving units. They can be had for very little, and can hold huge
amounts of weight to a wall.

I think they are called by the brand name "convenience", but Im not sure.
They have it by bulk and you can get it at almost any good sized hardware
store. BTW, you will need to buy a set of bolt cutters if you wish to do it
right.

They can be mounted and angled in just about any concieveable manner..

Rob


----- Original Message -----
From: jhaible <jhaible at debitel.net>
To: diy <synth-diy at node12b53.a2000.nl>
Sent: Saturday, September 09, 2000 3:45 AM
Subject: Re: multi - keyboard stand?


> > not a stand in sight... bits of old shelf and out of date electronics
> > mags/phone books
> > did the trick just fine!
>
> I used to have different stands, from the cheapest "X" shaped ones to
> expensive "A" shaped triple keyboard stands, but in the end I don't use
> any of them anymore. Plywood and Pine and custom building works best
> for me. I have 3 such stands now, all of them looking like a table on the
> bottom platform (and the wooden table legs are readily available).
> On top of this table, I have built what I needed for the specific synths.
> The OB-8 for instance is half covered by a wooden platform, such as
> the knobs are free, but the deep end of the enclosure without knobs
> is under the wooden platform. On top of it, the Modular system.
> A similar construction holds the CS-50 on top of the CX-3.
> And then there is a  stack of instruments with flat tops, VL-7
> on top of Lambda (flat top) on top of Kawai Piano (flat top).
> The "higher levels" (4th row) are not stands at all, but brackets that
> are fixed on the wall.
>
> JH.
>
>
>
>
>




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