🎶 Elevate Your Jam Session with Style!
The Pyle Multi Guitar Stand is a foldable, universal display rack designed to hold up to seven guitars, including acoustic, electric, and bass models. With rugged steel construction and velveteen rubber padding, it ensures safe and reliable placement for your instruments. Its sleek black powder-coat finish makes it perfect for both on-stage performances and studio settings.
M**N
Worth the bucks
The media could not be loaded. Good product, but be little careful while handling the stand.
L**E
Cheap rubbish
Really bad product, do not buy this and put your guitars on it. Very cheaply made considering it cost £52. The foam cover along the top didn;t even go all round, there was a cheap bit of tape on the back holding the foam cover on with a big gap. The foam also had chunks out of it. Just such a bad product.Built it and put one guitar on it and it was not sturdy at all. Unfortunately I binned the box otherwise I would have returned it.
M**Y
A couple of flaws
I like the style. It is cheaper than some of the others I have seen which is why I bought it. I figured that I would be hard pressed to buy the materials and make one D.I.Y. considering the price of materials, labor involved, and tools needed.Now that I received it have it assembled I see a few things I might change to make it have better support for a variety of electric guitars and bases and make it sturdier overall.1) One flaw I see is with the spacing of the two body rest horizontal bars. My Jazz bass, for example slips through and touches the ground unless I reverse which way it faces. It should not matter what direction any of the guitars face. Placing the body rest bars closer together would catch the variety of guitar and bass bodies better. A third cross bar mounted from underneath the legs may help support the body better also.2) Another flaw I see involves the neck support. It leans back too far and has too much play. I will try putting rubber stops under the attachment joints and using lock washers to keep the vertical support tubes from leaning back so far and from being so loose.These are things I am going to try.
S**N
Add two extra bolts!
I’m very pleased with the way the stand holds my guitars. Because it is designed to be collapsible, there’s the potential for disaster should someone vacuuming (more concerned with collecting dust bunnies and protecting the guitars ) decides to move the fully loaded rack by its upper bar alone. The single bolt holding the upper bar in place would pivot the bar forward knocking all the guitars to the floor. I drilled a second hole and installed another bolt to secure the arm in the upright position. See photo.
E**T
Heed my warning
The media could not be loaded. Wanted something to change up the room, this product seemed like a good fit, and hey what do you know there are a lot of positive reviews!Turns out most of you shouldn’t be reviewing anything actually.TLDR; If you are anything short of just starting playing ( and if you have 3+ guitars I imagine you are not) this is not the rack you want. Spend a couple extra dollars and protect your guitars, seriously.- It’s made out of the same round bar most single stands are made from, unsurprisingly, but it’s VERY unstable. It wobbles around with little effort, I’ll post a short clip.-the neck supports are very open meaning if you, your cat or a toddler bump into this thing there’s very little support holding your precious instruments in place. Quite literally just the foam they make a small depression in and the angle they sit in it are all that keep anything in place. Not secure at all. Something that cradles the neck would have been an easy solution to this.-similarly nothing holds them vertical on the bottom meaning a) guitars with an odd body shape may quite literally turn and FALL ONTO OTHER GUITARS ( seriously look at my pic) and b) it’s very easy to bump them together adding/removing them. A couple bumpers would have helped immensely if not eliminate the problem.-the foam that comes in it felt and looked very cheap. Actually the upper support just has a piece of tape covering the large seam where it was cut to fit on the bar.Look, I’m pretty handy, I had considered tack welding the frame to improve sturdiness and eliminating play in the frame, but it’s not worth it and realistically that’s 1 of 3 major issues I have with it. Will be returning
P**L
Poor quality manufacturing, but overall a nice stand
The stand, once fully assembled, is pretty nice and hold my guitars well. The main issue was the assembly. It seems there’s zero quality control at the factory. The threaded holes at the top rail were all poorly threaded and would not accept the spacer pegs. I had to tap new threads in all but one of the holes to screw the pegs in properly. On the lower end of the stand, while attempting to repeatedly screw on a wingnut, I finally realized it was missing threads entirely. For most people who don’t have a tap and die set on hand, I can see it being a huge hassle and waste of time to go to the hardware store to get spare hardware and/or a tap and die set, or even return it to exchange with another potentially poorly manufactured stand. At that price, it should at least be made properly! I did get a partial refund for the time I had to waste to assemble it properly, so thanks Amazon.
Trustpilot
4 days ago
2 months ago