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Reviewed in the United States on March 5, 2025
First attracted to the good price. Assembly was straight-forward and easy. I like that it was designed and built to hold 3 wide acoustics or 6 thin electrics or combination there of. It seems sturdy enough to secure even the max capacity. Please with the function and look.
The Connoissumer
Reviewed in the United States on February 23, 2025
I'm kinda meh on this stand. Any wood worker can tell from a few feet away that it's cheap veneer. And like other reviewers have pointed out there are lots of little blemishes in the routered edges of the veneer. The angle of the back bottom rest isn't sloped enough and the guitars seem to rest awkwardly on it.I can easily fit 6 guitars on it. I do like that it has felt support instead of rubber like some stands out there. I also love the darker color. Ease of assembly and sturdiness are fine. I have no issue trusting my very expensive guitars on it.I would not recommend it for portability. This will better serve in a permanent setting.
Jeff
Reviewed in the United States on February 12, 2025
It's a relatively simple design, but it works and it's sturdy and it looks great, more elegant and better put together than my metal stands!
The Couple
Reviewed in the United States on April 18, 2025
We have 3 guitars now in our house and I feel like they live in the way, because we want to take care of them, but also, I needed a solution to store them when my husband and kids didn't want to just leave them in a case. This rack is perfect. It goes together easily. Looks great while also letting the guitars shine. It's basically a functional art piece that proudly sits in our living room, while improving the clutter situation! We have a baby Taylor, a small acoustic, and a small electric and they all fit perfectly. (we did try some wall hooks/my youngest always struggled with them, so I like that this is on the floor, much easier access)
BK
Reviewed in the United States on December 5, 2024
This arrived very well packaged, but as you can see from photo 1, that didn't keep it from having areas of wood chipped away. The rack took longer to put together than anticipated because the instructions were less than adequate. There was no way to tell which direction the cams should be facing. And half the parts were not labeled with identifying letters. The replacement of soft strippable screws with fasteners entirely hex head was nice, but the hex heads on the wood screws were not deep enough to keep the hex head easily engaged. It made tightening the screws a bit difficult. And finally, it was done and it can hold up to six electric guitars or three acoustic/classical guitars. But if you look at photo 3, you'll notice that the felt top of the rear cross rail somehow missed the top of the rail toward the back of the rack. I don't see it contacting any of the guitars I place on it, but I'm not sure I'd put an expensive guitar on this rack because of it. Strich usually puts rubber tubing on that rail or completely covers the rail if they're using felt. Seems like sloppy work. Overall, I'm not happy with this guitar rack. There are better racks, many of them made by this company, and you'd be better off with them.
dgantt
Reviewed in the United States on December 5, 2024
I had high hopes for this guitar rack. I liked that the top neck rest area was padded, that it folded and that assembly used included hex wrenches instead of phillips head screws. It was well packaged and the finish of the pieces appeared nice. Instructions were cryptic but acceptable and some pieces did not have the alphabetic stickers to identify which piece was which. Upon unpacking the pieces, some of the felt padding had pulled loose and had to be re-glued. Not a biggie. The problems arose upon assembly. The two bolts in the base were not long enough to engage the threads of the T bolts in the adjoining base pieces. In addition, some of the pre-drilled holes were not completely drilled. I have a wood shop and was able to re-drill the holes and use a drill press to countersink the T nuts an additional 1/8" to allow the bolt treads to catch. I managed to get it assembled after about 1 hour of shop time and assembly but if you don't have the tools (drill, drill press, glue), you will be sending it back to amazon. Overall I would not recommend it.
Jon
Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2024
This is my review of the STRICH Multiple Guitar Stand. Please note that this is a VINE review, meaning I was sent the product to try and review at no cost to me. The stand comes ready to assemble. All parts were in the package, and it was packed well. This is made of particle board with a veneer. So do not over tighten the screws.The instruction sheet really has little to no text, just drawings. On mine, there was one glaring mistake. On step 3 it shows the two base legs that pivot. It shows the 2 part "L" nutcerts must be installed, but these were already installed. But, it shows these legs should be installed with the nutcerts to the center. This will not work, because the bolts are not long enough to even start into the threads in the nutcerts. So, I just swapped sides putting the nutcerts to the outside.The drawings showing parts E and F are unclear in the drawing as to which way to install. Common sense says, since these two parts will cradle your guitars, the tapered top edges need to form a "V".The felt on the part A and B wasn't glued properly on the rounded edge on one of these. I will glue that in place.The rack can hold up to six solid body electric guitars. I had hoped my new 40" acoustic electric guitar would arrive in time to try it out in the rack. It did not. But, if you have a wide body acoustic, it's going to take up more space. It may only hold three wide body guitars. I tried putting my Yamaha Guitelele into the rack, but it is just too small. It is only 27" long and with a much smaller body. This is not the fault of the product. This Yamaha is the same size as a tenor ukulele, so you won't get a soprano, concert, or tenor uke to fit in this rack. My 30" and 33" cigar box guitars will work in this, but the bodies are not wide enough to contact both the front and rear supports at the bottom. So these just use the front support, and it seems to be okay.Of course I'd rather have the parts of this rack be made of solid wood, but the price would have to go up accordingly. I see this is now selling at $60-15%discount, or $51. I think that's a pretty fair price.
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