which stand is sturdy enough to hold KRONOS 2- 61 keys
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which stand is sturdy enough to hold KRONOS 2- 61 keys
hi everyone i am bit confused about which keyboard stand is safe to hold my kronos
I've seen Hercules stands, out of which liked the
HERCULES TravLite Keyboard Stand KS118B
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wvK9Q7wo9rQ
its easy to carry since it is foldable
pls let me know your suggestions or should i go for
Hercules, Keyboard Stand, Double 'X' Type KS120B to be more on the safer side since it is double braced
waiting to hear from u all
I've seen Hercules stands, out of which liked the
HERCULES TravLite Keyboard Stand KS118B
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wvK9Q7wo9rQ
its easy to carry since it is foldable
pls let me know your suggestions or should i go for
Hercules, Keyboard Stand, Double 'X' Type KS120B to be more on the safer side since it is double braced
waiting to hear from u all
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I'd say to always go with double braced. You might one day have a heavier keyboard.
If music is the food of love, play on and play loud!
Gear: Kronos 73, Wavestation EX, Polysix, King Korg, Monotron and Monotron Duo, Minikorg, Moog Grandmother, my very old MiniKorg, 4 acoustic and 9 electric guitars, 1 Ibanez 5 string bass, a Steel guitar, a bunch of microphones, 2 pairs of studio monitors and other very cool toys, 1 wife and 4 cats and a lava lamp!
Gear: Kronos 73, Wavestation EX, Polysix, King Korg, Monotron and Monotron Duo, Minikorg, Moog Grandmother, my very old MiniKorg, 4 acoustic and 9 electric guitars, 1 Ibanez 5 string bass, a Steel guitar, a bunch of microphones, 2 pairs of studio monitors and other very cool toys, 1 wife and 4 cats and a lava lamp!
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- Joined: Sun Jun 19, 2011 11:06 pm
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Myself, I always found that A Frames bounced and I prefer the smaller footprint of the x stands. It's all a matter of personal taste though.
If music is the food of love, play on and play loud!
Gear: Kronos 73, Wavestation EX, Polysix, King Korg, Monotron and Monotron Duo, Minikorg, Moog Grandmother, my very old MiniKorg, 4 acoustic and 9 electric guitars, 1 Ibanez 5 string bass, a Steel guitar, a bunch of microphones, 2 pairs of studio monitors and other very cool toys, 1 wife and 4 cats and a lava lamp!
Gear: Kronos 73, Wavestation EX, Polysix, King Korg, Monotron and Monotron Duo, Minikorg, Moog Grandmother, my very old MiniKorg, 4 acoustic and 9 electric guitars, 1 Ibanez 5 string bass, a Steel guitar, a bunch of microphones, 2 pairs of studio monitors and other very cool toys, 1 wife and 4 cats and a lava lamp!
- Bald Eagle
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- Location: Long Island, NY
I use On Stage Stands Dual Tier stands. These are extremely sturdy and I have never had any problems. It's foldable although not as compact as some other stands.
X-Frames don't seem stable to me, they make me nervous having expensive gear on them.
X-Frames don't seem stable to me, they make me nervous having expensive gear on them.
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I've been using X stands since the early 90's and have never had a problem with them. I do recommend getting a very good one. I used to use the Ultimate Support I.Q. 3000 but even though my first one with 2 tiers still works I bough a newer one and the quality just wasn't the same. I now use a 3 tier Quiklok and love it. The small footprint works for me and I have a pedal board that I built that locks onto the feet so nothing moves. Live, I play standing up but in rehearsal and in my studio I play sitting down. I use the Quiklok in my studio and the Ultimate Support live.
If music is the food of love, play on and play loud!
Gear: Kronos 73, Wavestation EX, Polysix, King Korg, Monotron and Monotron Duo, Minikorg, Moog Grandmother, my very old MiniKorg, 4 acoustic and 9 electric guitars, 1 Ibanez 5 string bass, a Steel guitar, a bunch of microphones, 2 pairs of studio monitors and other very cool toys, 1 wife and 4 cats and a lava lamp!
Gear: Kronos 73, Wavestation EX, Polysix, King Korg, Monotron and Monotron Duo, Minikorg, Moog Grandmother, my very old MiniKorg, 4 acoustic and 9 electric guitars, 1 Ibanez 5 string bass, a Steel guitar, a bunch of microphones, 2 pairs of studio monitors and other very cool toys, 1 wife and 4 cats and a lava lamp!
- michelkeijzers
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I used to use X-stands in the beginning. I would recommand a double cross when you have a heavieri keyboard or use two keyboards.
Advantage: easy to setup, normally cheap to add a 2nd keyboard
Disadvantage: a big MIDI foot controller does not fit, mostly the distance / angle flexibility have limitations
After that I moved to a H-stand (table type).
Advantages: easy to setup
Disadvantage: normally for sitting positions, mine was just a bit too low. Also less flexibility in distance/angle.
Than I moved to an A stand.
Advantage: looks cool, everything is adjustable (height, number of synths, angle), can be detachable into small parts
Disadvantages: the angle can be adjusted, but is not 100% stable (good enough for me), the width of the keyboards are limited (width of the stand defines the max width of the synth), time-consuming to detach (and if not detached it is big, doesn't fit in my car).
I never considered a spider stand, since my MIDI pedalboard would not fit (like X-stands).
Advantage: easy to setup, normally cheap to add a 2nd keyboard
Disadvantage: a big MIDI foot controller does not fit, mostly the distance / angle flexibility have limitations
After that I moved to a H-stand (table type).
Advantages: easy to setup
Disadvantage: normally for sitting positions, mine was just a bit too low. Also less flexibility in distance/angle.
Than I moved to an A stand.
Advantage: looks cool, everything is adjustable (height, number of synths, angle), can be detachable into small parts
Disadvantages: the angle can be adjusted, but is not 100% stable (good enough for me), the width of the keyboards are limited (width of the stand defines the max width of the synth), time-consuming to detach (and if not detached it is big, doesn't fit in my car).
I never considered a spider stand, since my MIDI pedalboard would not fit (like X-stands).

Developer of the free PCG file managing application for most Korg workstations: PCG Tools, see https://www.kronoshaven.com/pcgtools/
Ultimate
I use an old Ultimate stand with longer bars for the Kronos (the current ones are called Apex series). I still think they are the best looking stands, good hight for standing position and easy to set up and after folding it is just a one big bar. There are versions that have mic stand build in.
The only disadvantage are the bars on the ground leaving no room for your pedals. I have placed my sustain pedal under an angle to solve the problem. This works fine, but when your are using a lot of pedals, it might not be suitable.
The only disadvantage are the bars on the ground leaving no room for your pedals. I have placed my sustain pedal under an angle to solve the problem. This works fine, but when your are using a lot of pedals, it might not be suitable.
<a href="https://sites.google.com/site/synthesizerrecipes/" target="blank">Synthesizer Recipes</a>
<a href="https://sites.google.com/view/wavestationreloaded" target="blank">https://sites.google.com/site/wavestationreloaded</a>
<a href="https://sites.google.com/view/wavestationreloaded" target="blank">https://sites.google.com/site/wavestationreloaded</a>
Re: Ultimate
That's why I got the Spider Pro. It's a column stand like the Ultimate, but because it sits on 4 legs there's room for pedalspostman wrote:I use an old Ultimate stand with longer bars for the Kronos (the current ones are called Apex series). I still think they are the best looking stands, good hight for standing position and easy to set up and after folding it is just a one big bar. There are versions that have mic stand build in.
The only disadvantage are the bars on the ground leaving no room for your pedals. I have placed my sustain pedal under an angle to solve the problem. This works fine, but when your are using a lot of pedals, it might not be suitable.
http://www.borsarionline.it/tastiere/k- ... 18860.html