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Mount-It! Mobile Projector and Laptop Stand (2 Shelves), Rolling Cart with Ventilated Tray, Heavy Duty, Height Adjustable Laptop and Projector Presentation Trolley, Black

  • Based on 1,709 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Sunday, Dec 1
Order within 9 hours and 6 minutes
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Features

  • VERSATILE WORKSTATION: Equipped with two adjustable trays, enjoy the versatility of mounting more than one projector, laptop or any combination of equipment and devices, saving you time and space.
  • TALL ADJUSTABLE PROJECTOR STAND: Easily adjust the height up to 57.5" with the top tray able to conveniently tilt up to 30 in both directions and the bottom tray able to adjust in height.
  • EASY PORTABILITY: The light-weight and portable design make rolling and maneuvering this mobile projector stand a breeze. 4 smooth-gliding omnidirectional casters allow you to adjust your station, with 2 locks built-in, ready to secure your set up in place.
  • HEAVY-DUTY DURABLE: The solid steel frame of this projector stand, its wide base, and metal lips were all engineered to withstand heavy use and rugged travel. This projector stand can hold up to 88 lbs of weight.
  • MAXIMIZED AIRFLOW COOLING: Keep your media devices running cool even during the longest presentations. Our intuitive airflow cooling vents are designed to disperse heat outwards, cooling your projector and preventing any risk of overheating.

Item Weight: 22.5 pounds


Item model number: MI-7943


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Date First Available: February 22, 2017


Manufacturer: Mount-It!


Country of Origin: China


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Sunday, Dec 1

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Ok, get what you pay for at this price point
See info on why I chose to buy this below as the rest of the review is TL;DR long. Price : 3.0, in 2nd price tier (see below) Assembly : 1.8 Fit/Finish : 2.8 Overall : 2.6-2.8, round up to 3 stars [Q] Would I buy it again knowing what I know now? [A] Maybe, but probably not. Would break my budget and go up to tier (c) -- see "why I chose..." My use: projector inside/outside on temporary screen for movies with friends. Stability was #1 criteria, which is mostly meets with caveats. Has some design flaws that could easily be overcome, but they impose some stability issues which required me to constantly adjust the feet after every 1-2 uses. Either the design needs closer tolerances or there need to be top screws at the base's cross bar/leg bar attachment point same as used on the vertical pole has. Using metal shims can reduce this and make it more stable on one-off basis if so inclined. Not easily adjusted, but the lower fixed shelf at ~27" and top shelf at lowest adjustment of 39 1/2" are close enough to what I need for most uses, I don't have to go through the pain of adjusting the height. My opinion is the "adjustable" part means at assembly time choosing the height you want. Its good enough for now. Got what I paid for, I guess. But adding just a minimum of 4 additional screws would have made this soooo much better in terms of base stability and alignment. Mid-weight mild steel frame. Shelves seem to be 3/32" mild steel also. The steel was fairly easy to bend into/out of shape (which is what the bolts do during assembly as this is required to overcome the loose part fit.) --- Why I chose to buy this item --- There seem to be three price ranges: a) low end (30$ +/- 10) b) mid level (70$ +/- 20) 2x bump up c) high end (180-250$ ) 2x bump up My criteria for choosing was fairly simple: 1. stability confidence that a mid-level $400-500 projector and/or $800 laptop wouldn't be at risk, due to stability, of falling over and being broken (would I be willing to risk use of my least expensive portable LED projector w/replacement cost of $250 on this choice?), 2. keeping it within a comfortable budget. 3. adjustable range of 24"-42" Non-criteria, but nice to have: 3. setup on flat/hard surface or uneven grass. Non-criteria 4. small storage footprint #1 means there will be stability that once set up it wont jiggle/bounce the image on screen as someone walks by. Short version as to my end choice: (a) was mostly (all?) tripods, and the mechanical base footprint is either too small, in my opinion, for the stability level I'm looking for or there was the significant potential added mechanical instability (slop) due to its design principals employed or mechanical fit & fitness issues in its manufacture. - reading the reviews seem to reflect those concerns had merit - all dropped because these less expensive models do not have my confidence of repeatable use via-a-vis stability, aka my projector/laptop are at the potential risk of falling/breaking. So, the majority of (a), even though the tripod designs seemed ideal for my purpose, were dubious choices for me as I had reservations about long term stability. The vertical moment arm with a weight at the end (my laptop/projector) can quickly hit a tipping point based upon the base footprint, especially as the set height increases. (c) out of my price range. But Roland SS-PC1 or Roland PDS-20 ($180) tripod design would be on my short list to look at, along with ULINE's H-9014 ($200) portable desk design. There were two main choices for sale in (b) which are the same exact design. The design seems to have three specific design/mechanical flaws: - the attachment point between cross bar and leg bar in base has inherint wobble, and - ease of adjustment of vertical height (more of a choose at assembly time). - a few tack points of welding vs full seam welded --- Assembly and use experience --- The metal is mid-weight mild steel. The "mild" part plays a significant role in that the fit of parts is quite loose, cross bar to leg bars had a 1/8"-3/16" gap once legs placed into U holder for same. So the key to stability in the base is to tighten the screws to bend the mild steel up against the leg bars to provide stability. A 2nd issue is there is a 1/16-3/32" gap between the top of the leg bars and the cross bar. The good news is you need this slop to get the feet to lay close to flat so you don't have to keep adjusting the feet to maintain 4 point contact on a flat surface. The bad news is that even tightening the cross bolts to near striping failure point is not sufficient to prevent the leg bars from changing position over time of repeated use and thus requiring readjustment of the feet to maintain 4 point contact stability. Am thinking of getting some metal shims to push between the two mating surfaces to help. A design change to include two screws on the top would also solve this in that they would prevent the ability for the leg arms to pivot up/down due to that gap in mating surfaces. I can easily insert 22mil metal sheeting between the cross bar and leg mounting surfaces once it was assembled and all tightened down. And while there are 2 cross through bolts they're attachment tolerances are proving insufficient at preventing up/down pivoting/movement. Adding shims between the mating surfaces should help with this I hope. The rolling feet only have 2 locking members, the instructions says to place them at the same side of the two leg bars -- that is 1 locking wheel on each leg bar. Because of the issue with the 4 rollers having alignment issues over time, even when all four wheels are in contact with floor, one tends to have less weight on it making just 2 locking wheels insufficient for the placement stability I was looking for. Using 4 locking wheels with this design would have been better. Bottom line is that more often than not only one of the locking wheels had sufficient contact weight resulting in unit constantly at risk of pivoting if any brushed up against it. So I've used this 3 times and have had to adjust the wheels 4 times to keep it from wobbling and get near same weight distribution per wheel for stability. Also I've found for my purposes leaving the wheels unlocked has been more helpful than locking them. The wheels are a hard plastic and tend to glide when locked anyway. If I decide to keep using this vs chucking it into the metal recycling bin, replacing the casters with neoprene versions is the 2nd thing I'd do (1st being the metal shims to take out bottom cross bar/leg connection pivot/wobble). The upright is fine, 4 top screws to take out wobble -- applying this same principle to the cross bar and leg bars would fix a lot of sins with this design! -- and a cross through bolt. I'm not convinced the cross bolt actually does anything with regards to stability... I mean the top 4 bolts provided the same amount of connection stability in both axis, so why the cross thru bolt. I appreciate it, it provides a some reflection of thought, but what I expect is that the cross bolt was the only bolt in the original design interation, and the 4 top screws were added later to remove unacceptable wobble on the vertical pole. Which makes sense give the higher the vertical pole is adjusted, the more moment arm you have and the easier it would be for weight (your laptop) at the end of that arm to induce wobble. So the lack of tight tolerances in the base are where fit and finish get knocked down by a serious amount in my personal view. That and the top plate had scuffs and wear from how the shipping container was designed (or they are just from the manf process). One of the other knocks on fit and finish, is the 4 point tack welding of the vertical pole to the mounting plate and ditto for the side arm. Welding completely around the pole to the mounting plate would have given me more confidence in the mechanical wear ability of this design. As it stands, on fatigue crack in one weld point and the other three are likely to not be far behind vis-a-vis time/use basis. The vertical pole is adjusted using two cross through bolts. To adjust you have to manually align the top pole as you raise and lower looking for the holes in the inner pole that is being moved up/down. And at the lowest setting the top bolt goes through the plastic end cap that freely spins, so a 2 stage alignment. To adjust the pole height, undo the bolts and go through the whole procedure again. *If* or when I have to do this in the future, I'll use a permanent silver ink marker for a vertical line through center of each bolt hole on the inner pole and draw horizontal lines around the pole at each inner pole hole to help with ease the issues of finding black on black on black holes to align. Note two bolts are needed to prevent pivot wobbling of the inner pole as tolerances as such there is a lot of slop in between outer and inner poles. Again this is ok for this price point, but was another vote point when I was assembling that "adjustable" height meant at assembly point in time... not at every use. Other issue was the twisty knob placement, pictorial directions are on the left, but I'm right handed so put them on the right ... but this was above the fixed shelf so after one use and finding that they were difficult to get to while the shelf was in use (to re-tighten them), I switched them to the left. This would be more of a problem if the unit was more easily adjustable, but since its a pain to adjust due to having to manually align everything using a flashlight to see when the black hole shows up vs the black pole... well, I won't be adjusting this too often or at all. Attaching the top plate to the pole was a bit of a pain as there are two plastic shims that are slightly rounded to help mechanical connection. I ended up pre-fitting these and attaching them with a bit if silicone, letting that set, before adding the top plate. A temporary method I tried was with using scotch tape to hold them in place while assembling, and then cutting off the pieces afterward. But I had to disassemble to switch the bolts around trying to get the cross through carriage bolts square end to seat better -- but it didn't the top shelf bracket has square holes but the pole where it attaches does not. Another fit/finish or manf issue with both needing these plastic shims and the carriage through bolts not seating as the hole within the pole was not square cut as needed. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 28, 2021 by Sis55

  • Awesome Mobile Cart
This is a great deal!!! Got the cart super fast. It was easy to assemble, I recommend you use your personal 10mm wrench other than the one provided for better grip. The casters glide smoothly over the floor. The cart is sturdy and will last a long time.
Reviewed in the United States on January 17, 2023 by Shawn

  • Wobbles on touch
The two trays are nice and overall the stand works great. The assembly is easy and all, but no matter how much you tighten anything it wobbles a lot from any touch. I tried putting paper into the areas that had slack but that did not fix the issue. The cutouts for the assembly holes are just too large. The wheels work well even on carpet. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 18, 2022 by Reid Kirschman

  • Works ... but ...
Purchased this for our church video device and after a bit of use the top table doesn't quite hold to horizontal position and leans. Needs to be re-adjusted every once in awhile, but otherwise works for us.
Reviewed in the United States on December 25, 2022 by boboprf

  • Great product .
The instruction manual isn't specific on which screws goes where , you kinda have to freestyle through the build .
Reviewed in the United States on November 21, 2022 by Amazon Customer

  • Great for tiny spaces
I bought this to install my projector. I have a small 10X12 bedroom and use a projector to watch movies at night. This is great and sturdy product. I usually plug in my ipad with a HDMI cable and play the movies. the ventilated tray's help with projector not getting too hot and the lower shelf is useful to rest my Ipad on it. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2022 by Ritu

  • Excellent for more than just projectors!
I was recently approached by a leading television network to be interviewed in my studio, via a large tablet like all-in-one PC (Cisco DX70-08). The producer needed to have the unit setup in different positions, for different angle shots. The Mount-It stand seemed the perfect choice, rather than to perch the heavy, 14" wide tablet PC on an a bulky, non-movable platform, or cabinet. Moving the PC to different positions was made much easier with this stand. Assembly was easy, and only took about half an hour to complete. The stand seems fairly stable, but if you're supporting a camera equipped device on it, just be careful not to bump it, as it will sway a little, from a strong bump. I never felt afraid the device would not handle the load of a DX70 PC, but it handles it nicely. I also liked the fact the stand's platforms have cable management holes, as well as slits near the edges of the platforms. This makes it possible to strap down a projector, camera, or PC / laptop to it. Also a plus, are the raised edges, which stop your gear sliding right the way off, in the event of a tip-over situation. The platforms are very stable, and made of thick metal. I wish the stand had quick release latches for easy raising, and lowering of the mast. As it is, you have to completely remove the two bolts from the mast, in order to raise, or lower the mast. I also wish the loser platform could be raised, or lowered, as well. As it is, you "have" to sit, if you're running projection, with a laptop. I suppose one could clamp another laptop shelf to the rig, at a higher position. I like the 30 degree tilt capability of the upper platform. The locking casters are also a plus. Great, if you're doing video production with the stand, or positioning a projector. I like that the mast can be raised enough to shoot projection over a seated, or standing audience, no problem. This stand is also great, if you're in a place that won't allow ceiling mounted projectors, as it has a fairly small footprint. I only wish this thing could be easily collapsed. However, it is fairly small, when the mast is lowered, and it's light enough to carry, and load into a vehicle, yet heavy enough, it won't tip over, as long as you don't overload the stand. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 3, 2020 by Amazon Customer

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