Elevate Your Setup! 🚀
The Laptop Tripod Stand is an adjustable, portable solution designed for professionals needing a reliable platform for laptops, projectors, and other equipment. With a height range of 17.7" to 47.2", a 300° rotating tray, and a sturdy metal construction, it offers versatility and stability for various settings, from classrooms to stages. Its foldable design ensures easy transport and storage, making it a must-have for on-the-go presentations.
Manufacturer | HOLDOOR |
Brand | HOLDOOR |
Item Weight | 4.4 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 11.6 x 4 x 17.6 inches |
Item model number | HD0605 |
Color | Black |
Material Type | Metal |
Number of Items | 1 |
Size | 11.6*4*17.6inch |
Manufacturer Part Number | HD0605 |
N**.
Perfect For Travel
As a DJ, this is just the right size to fit my Denon Prime Go. I've done mixes in the most obscure places with just this Tripod, a Tiny JBL speaker and my small DJ Controller. Its small enough to fit in a backpack (Although it may pertude) but yet its still light so you can fit it on a carry on luggage with no issues.
S**D
Great product at a great price
I picked this one because Amazon recommended it. I was afraid it wouldn’t be the greatest quality since it was fairly inexpensive. I’m pleasantly surprised. I’ve been using it for a couple months now and it performs better than I expected. I would give it a 9 out of 10 if that was an option. It’s not quite as stable as I would want but it is more than stable enough. The only other small issue is the extensions don’t flow easily up and down. I may try to put some graphite on the shafts to see if it can get a little more smooth.
D**E
Best of Three
I returned two other brands before this one, I am keeping this one. I had to retun the others becuase they did not go as low as the description shows. Neither does this one, that is why I deducted one star. However it did go the lowest of the three, about 23". I guess you could remove the rods to make it go lower, but then it would not lock. I do like that the top tray on this one is one piece. It may not be the best for travel. but good if you keep in one place. The others were 2 pieces. Good overall design.
C**S
Seek ye better quality
Let's get out of the way the "you get what you pay for" moral. We all know that one, which is why I'd say to go from this place and look for similar things in a higher price range that hopefully will be a better experience.I'm on my second of these already, as it happens. Stand Number 1 I caught at a discount, and decided to go for it. A couple days later when it was delivered (make sure to check the "ship in Amazon packaging" box, by the way; they will try to ship this in its retail packaging otherwise) I set about assembling it, and found parts missing. Nothing completely structurally vital, but it was missing one of the rubber feet, and the phone holder attachment. Not a very good first impression, eh? So I got on with customer service about this, hoping they might be able to provide the missing pieces, but no luck. Unfortunately, they also would not begin a replacement process for it, only giving me the option to send it back for a refund, and then place a new order for another copy. Of course by now the discounted price was no longer available, meaning reordering it would incur me additional cost. Spent about half an hour on customer service chat about that without a satisfactory resolution, but ultimately I ended up ordering a second one later that evening.Right, so, a couple of days later, here we are with Stand Number 2. It has all of its parts! Amazing! Unfortunately, a new problem became quickly evident. The tray on top where the laptop sits is attached on a pivot. A bolt and big plastic knob hold the connection together and are supposed to tighten it and keep the tray from pivoting freely. But as tightly as I could turn the knob (literally to the point of scraping skin off my thumb. ow.) it would not gain any tension. I tried taking the assembly apart (this section comes pre-assembled in the box) and putting it back together to make sure everything was seated fully and going where it needed to, because, of course, small errors happen and often can be solved easily. But no good this time.I still had the first one on hand, and I knew its pivot joint would actually tighten and hold in place very well, so I began working with both at once to diagnose. The culprit was the metal plate that is the top of the pivot joint. The fork that attached it to the top of the mast may be slightly too wide, or bent somehow, but it's impossible for any assembly of this joint using the top plate from Stand Number 2 to secure in position. So since Number 1 was going back as defective/missing parts anyway, I swapped the pivot section between them. Don't tell anybody. With that, I have a complete, and functional laptop stand, and it only took combining pieces of two different units together to get a single working one...Now, the good: This extends to become rather tall. I'm about six feet tall, and I can raise this enough so my laptop screen is nearly at eye-level for me. The phone holder is a neat bonus, and the flexible arm for it is an actual gooseneck-jointed column, not just a thick piece of bendable metal like the cheap similar products you find in discount stores. It's very easy to move around, but relatively sturdy. The phone adapter has attachment points at the middle-back, as well as at one end, in case you need some extra room. It's a surprisingly thoughtful option. It's also theoretically easy to put together, in a situation where you receive one with all of its parts and/or everything works right. Mainly you're just sliding sections of the mast in to each other, and then screwing the tray on with the included plastic wingnuts and an Allen-wrench screwdriver. It takes barely any time or skill.The bad: This is wobbly. The sliding joints along the mast tighten enough that they won't slip back down under a reasonable load, but they don't seem to tighten enough that there isn't a little bit of play, especially when you near maximum height. The tripod base similarly doesn't seem to want to tighten as much as I'd like, and the base can still settle a little bit when you first set it down.Another possible issue is the tray itself. It's attached with four screws, whose heads stick up above the inside surface of the tray. If your laptop is placed directly down on the tray, the screws could damage the case. A piece of foam is included to line the tray, but its thickness is equal to the rim around the edge of the tray. Using it means there's no raised edge anymore. The foam will probably help to resist some slips, but it feels a little bit worrying. If you want to take advantage of the raised edge to help hold your laptop in the tray, you might want to get something like a cheap, thin placemat and trim it to fit inside the tray. You only need enough thickness to soften the edges of the screw heads, so it'd be easy to find a suitable liner other than the provided foam.I'm not especially satisfied with this, but I think it'll probably do what I need it to as long as I'm careful about how I use it. That's not the experience I'd want to have when paying the list price on this, and having to go through two of them to cobble together one that's "basically right" isn't something that should need to be done in any case. If you've read through all of this, I think you'll already conclude that the message here is "look elsewhere", but to be clear, I do not recommend this at all.
M**T
Stands up to contant, daily use
My wife is a talk therapist and uses this as a laptop stand for video call with clients. It's a set-it-and-forget-it sort of thing, but is easily adjustable when I want to use it, too.
Trustpilot
1 week ago
2 days ago