websites for studio furniture?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Jason M Hancock
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Re: I have omnirax...

joker said:
Check out my setupn with www.omnirax.com furniturehttp://www.delongwebdesign.com/studio.gif



I have the same Apex keyboard stand - how do you like yours? I found mine to be very unstable on carpet, but great on solid floors of any sort.
 
My stand...

I like it quite a bit. Especially when I went out gigging. Easy to set up and very portable. When I first started out I had one of those tube type stands for 2 keyboards and it seemed to take forever to set up. Then in college I put my old Roland Jupiter -6 on the bottom tier and it I guess it wasn't tight enough and it flipped over backwards...I cried...buttons popping off everywhere...Oh well...
 
Re: My stand...

joker said:
I like it quite a bit. Especially when I went out gigging. Easy to set up and very portable. When I first started out I had one of those tube type stands for 2 keyboards and it seemed to take forever to set up. Then in college I put my old Roland Jupiter -6 on the bottom tier and it I guess it wasn't tight enough and it flipped over backwards...I cried...buttons popping off everywhere...Oh well...

Oh, I've dropped/tipped equipment over before, and I too cried. So far the list of damaged gear is limited to three -

1. Rhodes 88 electric piano - it was standing on edge leaning on a bass amp (with caster) while we were setting up the stage, and after sitting still for a long time (20 minutes?) the amp started to roll. WHAP. Piano hit the ground flat, breaking the sounding board inside (nasty crack) and the hinges to the keyboard cover piece.

2. Another time the same bass amp (Peavey TKO120) was sitting at the top of the stairs, and decided to leap down the stairs. It survived just fine but the sheetrock, wood railing, and other parts of the stairs didn't fare as good. Must be a possessed amp :)

3. My friend's "RAT" distortion box somehow fell out of the milk crate, and our drummer backed over it with his Dually. The case survived, but all the knobs/switches were pushed into the unit and made a nasty crunch sound.

*I* personally cried over my piano, the rest of it, well, was inconvienent but not the end of the world. The piano was fixed for a mere $850, an expense at that time that left me without car insurance for a few months :(
 
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