Just a word of warning to everyone, especially those of you with pointy guitars, and Rhoads in particular!
I had been using a Hercules stand with my Rhoads for years. Today it broke, and only luck saved my guitar's wing tip.
As I was moving the stand with the guitar on, the grip/trigger adjusting mechanism popped out. Fortunately I was holding the guitar. After inspection, the plastic grip thing has gone all sticky, the way that a cheap bicycle grip or tire would be if left out in the sun for a fe months. The area around the trigger hinge was all cracked; a piece had broken clean off.
The stand (this one, but they all use the same grip afaik) has always been indoors, never tossed around or mishandled in any way, I don't even smoke.
The way the mechanism is designed, there is a strong spring pushing the grip lever into the notches that keep the stand at the desired height (that part is secure enough) but all the stress is handled by the little strip of plastic that holds the pivot point that is the part that broke. A large area around it had stress fractures.
If you have guitars resting on Hercules stands - and many of us do - do yourselves a favor and have a quick look to see that everything is allright. A reminder that even set-and-forget mechanisms need a periodical check.
I had been using a Hercules stand with my Rhoads for years. Today it broke, and only luck saved my guitar's wing tip.
As I was moving the stand with the guitar on, the grip/trigger adjusting mechanism popped out. Fortunately I was holding the guitar. After inspection, the plastic grip thing has gone all sticky, the way that a cheap bicycle grip or tire would be if left out in the sun for a fe months. The area around the trigger hinge was all cracked; a piece had broken clean off.
The stand (this one, but they all use the same grip afaik) has always been indoors, never tossed around or mishandled in any way, I don't even smoke.
The way the mechanism is designed, there is a strong spring pushing the grip lever into the notches that keep the stand at the desired height (that part is secure enough) but all the stress is handled by the little strip of plastic that holds the pivot point that is the part that broke. A large area around it had stress fractures.
If you have guitars resting on Hercules stands - and many of us do - do yourselves a favor and have a quick look to see that everything is allright. A reminder that even set-and-forget mechanisms need a periodical check.
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