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Magic1 Elite user Los Angeles 408 Posts |
Well come on Stperformer! LOL. Ask your friend who owns it where he got it. Come back and tell us.
Thanks! |
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WoodRat Loyal user California 233 Posts |
Here's another idea. It's a $40 conductor's music stand. Holds lots of weight and very stable, folds down nice and compact. Remove the platen. Get a $3 threaded electrical box cover from your local hardware store as a flange for your favorite table top and screw a short $3 lawn sprinkler riser into it. Sturdy, no spin, cheap, and easy to maintain. Under $50. Hmm, if I were really clever, I'd take a picture of mine and post it.. but I'm not feeling that clever at the moment...
Stand: http://www.guitarcenter.com/ProLine-GMS8......33581883 Example Cover Plate: http://www.foxelectricsupply.com/content......UL30377W Example Riser: http://www.amazon.com/Rain-Bird-2-Inch-S......00CSXH5A Cheers!
Learn something new everyday.
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DoctorCognos Elite user 413 Posts |
My personal opinion, although it wont fit into a backpack which was the question that start this thread, is a tray jack. With a separate top. Mine is carpeted on one side and framed, so I can do cups and balls, the carpet lets me do other things too.
But since we are talking tables here, I also suggest that you have a drape, to cover the details of the legs, etc, that can be visually distracting, and you want your audience directed to where you want, not at the legs of your table, watching it, them wobble, or whatever. BroDavid aka The Doctor
The Doctor Knows.....
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DanielMooncalf Regular user Kansas City 113 Posts |
That's expensive. I'd hate to see the wind, a stumbling drunk, or a child leaning on it; knock it over on the rough concrete, basically ruining it.
Sturdy keyboard stand. 1 inch slab of plywood with either the corners cut off or framed with 1x1 wood. 2 Yards of pretty, cheap black cloth $2/yard or less. Less than $100, and it will last you a very, very long time. |
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Roland Henning Special user Kiel, Germany 511 Posts |
Quote:
On 2010-10-15 02:18, BenRoss wrote: I have seen this table. I don't recommend it. It won't survive a day on the street. |
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Mario Morris Inner circle Mario Morris 2044 Posts |
Quote:
On 2011-02-05 16:36, Roland Henning wrote: Ive seen it too and I agree! |
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espmagic Special user 978 Posts |
Here's what I did: I had a welder put together an h-frame that fit into a standard black briefcase - stable enough to support a small child! A small hole in the bottom with a thread that allows a drum/cymbal stand to screw into it (and allows for varying height of the case/table). The stand, all props, close-up pad, and the sign - which velcros onto the case in a position where it can be seen by the audience - all fits inside, so I can walk out with a brief case, open it, set up the table, and do the whole show.
Strangely enough, I haven't used it in a while, since I have changed the "feel" of my act/show - anyone interested in it? PM me... Lee |
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djurmann Inner circle thinks time to practice and stop writing 1481 Posts |
The camera tripod idea is a nice one.....I am thinking it would work well if the street is on a hill. (Everywhere I am looking at is).
Any help as to the best way to do this much appreciated. I am thinking plywood, with a foam mat glued to it, covered with cloth and surrounded by a picture frame as suggested in another thread. Danny |
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