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Your cart is empty.John
2025-08-13 16:23:02
I got this to keep the desktop off the tile floor as to not suck up dust and dirt. Sturdy and rolls well, easy to build.
Therese Bauters
2025-07-01 20:36:40
Product is sturdy and works well
Paper Tigrrr
2025-05-27 17:14:51
A not-so-fancy simple design stand that is convenient to have. Most will probably not need it, but I argue you should have one unless your tower/case is on your desk instead of the ground. Besides the ability to move my PC around, if need be, I like that it elevates my PC off the ground so that I get more airflow through the bottom of the tower. I have two fans on the bottom as intake and three fans AIO on top as exhaust. It makes cleaning and vacuuming the area much easier. I can roll it to the side or just sweep the gap on the bottom.It's study and feels solid enough once put together. At its minimum width, it fits my Lian Li A3 case perfectly. It's more solid and stable when the stand is at its minimum width (both plates are touching). As you increase the width, there is more side-to-side play if you don't tighten the bolt and nut enough. Still relatively solid, nonetheless. Adjusting the stand is easy with T-handle knobs.TIP: During initial assembly, flip the stand upside down and lay it on top of your tower. Makes assembly easier as well as give you the proper width adjustment so you don't have to do it later. Just be smart to not scratch your tower lol.Assembly is easy. Takes like 5 minutes or less. Casters are decent. They do lock but, if you're on hardwood, flooring the caster will still slide around being that the wheels are smooth and plastic. Good construction and overall quality. The thickness is not too thin but similar to the panel thickness of a quality PC case.Overall, outstanding stand with a simple design that doesn't need to stand out but still stand tall with its competitors at this price point. 5 Stands... I mean Stars.
ex-Gooserider
2025-04-18 17:46:16
The stand is quite well described and is quite suitable for most tower style PC's. I have a very big and fancy CoolerMaster tower case and it was not quite wide enough. I had to drill four additional holes in the side pieces in order to get it wide enough to fit my particular case. However most cases shouldn't have this problem. If the case has feet or legs those might need to be removed.Assembly is nearly tool-free. The spreader bars attach to the side pieces with carriage bolts and knobs. The casters screw into some PEM nut type fittings and need a wrench to tighten them - a very cheap & cheerful stamped steel wrench is included - not great but does the job.The casters are locking, which I don't like, and didn't see an easy way to disable the locks, but are tolerable. The entire unit is definitely on the light duty side, but is quite sufficient to do the task it's designed for, namely short distance moves on smooth floors. Given the small diameter caster wheels, it probably would have trouble on soft carpets.Overall good for the task
Tima
2025-03-23 10:48:37
The Hovadova adjustable Metal Computer Tower Stand works as described. It's made well and easy to put together. It keeps my desktop off the carpet and makes moving the PC from under the desk easy. It fits my PC well. Good product.
T. Towe
2025-03-15 17:38:37
After assembly, it's sturdy, square (if you square it up during assembly), and rolls easily. I was looking for a stand to make it easier to mess with the cables behind my desktop PC, this is a good solution.NOTE: the instructions are awful, but it's still pretty simple, there are only 4 pieces to the stand, plus 4 bolts, 4 wing nuts, and 4 castors.1. Insert the bolts into the long rectangular slots in the slim cross-pieces (the heads of the bolts go into the "U" of the cross-pieces). The bolts have square shafts directly below the heads, so they cannot turn after insertion.2. Place one cross-piece on top of one of the large base pieces of the stand, slipping a bolt into a square hole in the base piece (once again, square hole, square shaft, if it's inserted correctly the bolt will not turn), then loosely tighten one of the butterfly nuts onto the bolt. Repeat with all 4 bolts and butterfly nuts.3. Slide the base pieces together/apart until you have the width you want, then tighten the butterfly nuts. Strong hand tightening is fine, the finish on the metal pieces won't let things slip.4. Screw the castor bolts into the tapped holes in the bottom of the base pieces. Do it by hand as far as you can, then finish tightening with the included crappy hex wrench.5. Unlock the castors if you want to roll it around (the little plastic "lever" on the side of each castor).My case is only about 8.5in wide, so I slide the base pieces together until they touched (minimum width), then set the base "upright" on its edge on my tile floor before tightening the wing nuts, to make it as square as possible.
Vu B.
2024-12-14 18:47:23
This is a nicely made computer rolling stand. It's pretty easy to assemble and come with tools included. The wheels are lockable and roll pretty well. My biggest issue is that it wouldn't fit my case. It was just a 1/4~3/8" too narrow at max expansion. If the cross braces had the slots cut about 1/8" longer on each side, it would have just fit. However, I can't even use it. Otherwise, the contruction is fairly robust and feels like it could support a decent amount of weight.
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