I Can't Believe This Monitor Arm Costs THIS MUCH!!! #shorts I bought the world's widest monitor,tech,technology,gaming setup,monitor,sanmsuny odyssey g9
Man saw that he kept screwing for a millisecond after they went in fully and immediately assumed that they are stripped ☠️ what are your screwed made of? Playdoh?
@MretIDK You asking that question tells me you've never actually built a PC in any way before. The screws for ALL of it are soft as shit and will strip if you just look at them a little too hard.
you can use plywood in between the clam and desk to reinforce the living daylights out of them. Particularly, thich plywood. It wont match most of the time but your desk probably wont buckle under the weight.
Why spend thousands on a monitor and like $100 on the the thing that the monitor sits on wait, i'm using £1000 of monitor on a £30 medium density fiberboard desk, but I plan on using this as firewood pretty soon
@Adam Meme it’s because that desk is super trendy and everyone has it. I can’t knock it too hard because I own it too. But I don’t have crazy ass monitors like that. It’s definitely a nice budget desk. Shit the arm for his monitor is probably the cost of the desk now that I’m thinking about it
That said. Most people don't know the first thing about what their desk is made of, furniture, wood, or such subject. Ask them how many transistors their CPU has and they will tell you all about the manufacturing process etc. Ask them about their desk and they'll be like "Hurr... it's sturdy!" It's really that simple. Not saying that people are stupid for not knowing about desks. Just that it's not a common knowledge set.
@Florin Pandele ...which is the reason we buy nothing directly from apple considering their only actually good products are their CRT's of old and the iPod. :)
It's a luxary item, if he wanted it to simply be higher, he would just grab a bunch of box and stack it like that. But he wants to spend money therefore he buys luxary items. Like those items cannot be bought by everyone and that's the point, but it's also not needed at all. You could buy 2 monitors instead of whatever wide monitor he has and it would be as good, maybe even better.
this one has a gas strut to allow you to move the monitor to any position and it'll stay there you don't have to bolt down the position of the monitor like the TV stands the gas strut and the weight capacity are what make it $300. they have a single monitor one for $100 something
I've worked with a lot of professional constructors, and I have to say, I've heard more than half of them start "shouting" don't fall, don't fall, pls don't fall lol 😅. I've also done it many times myself lol. Good job fella 👍
@Tim Richardson the arm will be fine. Those little VESA holes shouldn't be overtorqued though. It will most likely be fine, since they need to hold the whole monitor, but it's still a unnecessary risk.
@S. K. its an expensive mistake even if using the right tool things can still go wrong. Ive seen a friend use this method and shatter their screen, always hand tools when electronics are involved.
Bro i had slip disc when i was younger because i cheap out on chairs. After i got that sorted out i bust out top dollar for new expensive chair. From that on im not gona cheap out for health.
The solution is not that difficult. The problem is the clearance to the wall, so simply move the table a couple inches from the wall to give the stand as much room as it needs to support the monitor. You will gain at least the space you lost from the 'arm'. Place the monitor stand as far back the stand will allow without hanging off the desk. The you can use any stand including your 'free one', w/ some type of block just under the base to raise.
I got a dual monitor stand, and honestly, I didn’t use the second monitor stand for a while because I had my 27in main monitor and a 13in drawing tablet as my second. But eventually I got a 17in older monitor and rotated it right above my drawing tablet and my 3 monitor set up looks great! Not perfect, but still great!
"For people wondering the background music is Nocturne in E Flat Major by Chopin (also known as Op. 9 No. 2)" Nobody asked... but thank you for that information
@Swede4P nah i actually appreciate you telling me.. Like literally nobody asked and nobody needed to know that information, but you gave it anyway.. And I kind of appreciate that because now if I ever want to listen to it again I can. Thank you
as someone who had to set that arm up, (on a crg9 tho) follow instructions. it says to mount the base first. if you need to move it, you need to take the monitor off. or be really strong, your call. you then need to tweak the hydraulics with the adjustment screw.
With the studio display the height option stand costs 400 extra. Thank you for this video, this is the first time in my life I think that these 400 bucks were spent well.
Suggestion, use thumb screws, attach arm to monitor then place it on the second arm. I had 5 screens and it’s the easiest and best way. Did the same thing for a 43” TV using an arm. And hold the screen to your chest so you can support it with your forearm and have your hands free to guide the arms together.
@P Hlebr I wouldn’t raise my desk. Most people need to keep their desk close to their elbow height for proper posture. Some people like higher, that’s on them. However, now you’ll have to match the height of the desk, matching the height of the desk runs back into the same problem of monitor height you’re talking about. 20” on a desk… is still 20” on the desk even if the desk was placed on top of the Empire State Building. Monitor arm is better. I think you’re suggesting monitor risers, not desk risers. Either way, I would still go with an arm, desk or wall mounted. More freedom of movement.
Remember children, always use power tools when running down screws or bolts into equipment that cost 1000's of dollars and is mostly made of plastic....
For my odyssey Neo g9 I just made my own mount with a couple pieces of pipe and welded the metal bracket to the pipe. It can’t move forward and back like yours can but it can move up and down, left and right just fine and it was less than $5 to build and that was for the argon and wire (used scrap metal and bolts to build it)
it's worth it, besides the other arms that say they would support an ultrawide of that size won't be able to do it with this particular monitor because of the weight. you spend more...you get quality.
if you want to push the stand down then there are screws in the middle that you need to loosen + the monitor's weight itself will fix the stand's height the way you want it if this helps