🎶 Elevate Your Sound Experience!
The SPS-506B Ceiling Speaker Mounts offer a robust and stylish solution for securely mounting large surround sound speakers. With a load capacity of up to 90 lbs, these mounts allow for flexible installation options, including 360° horizontal adjustment and 90° tilt, ensuring optimal sound direction. Crafted from solid steel with a sleek black finish, they are compatible with most speakers and can be installed in various settings, from home theaters to conference rooms.
G**3
Yes
I recently moved and was setting up a new sound system in my home theater so I needed some proper heavy brackets. These fit the bill. I just wish there was something in the photo that would show proper size. I understand that it is in the description, however, it would be nice to see something like a hand, a ruler, something like that. Otherwise, very sturdy product. You should have no problem holding up some heavy things. I don't know about you but myself I like a visual representation just me.
M**Y
This is a really good mount!
Trying to find a sturdy secure wall mount, for large bookshelf speakers, on Amazon is not an easy task. Most of the ones you will find are junk.This mount is extremely well made and very heavy duty. Now, would I hang a 100 pounds on it....I don't know about that, but the large speakers I did hang, were about 25 pounds each and they are very secure. I would go at least 50 without a problem with this mount.There is no supplied mounting hardware, this should be included if you ask me, but this one is about as good as it gets.
H**S
They do exactly as they should. How you use them is your responsibility.
I would consider buying a set of these to use as a pedestal on my drill press. That's not hyperbole; I've never encountered a speaker mount that could double as a self-defense device (also, it would bolt up to the base. Really. I'm not kidding.)If you're using these as wall-mount--my guess is that's at least half of the people who buy them--your purpose will be better-served by replacing the connecting-bolt with a shorter one. After all, you're going to the hardware store anyway since these don't come with any mounting hardware. That seems to have drawn the ire of a lot of people who are used to a bag of plastic whatsits and indecipherable "instructions" included with everything but really, it's 2021, you should know by now that there's no such thing as "universal fit" and you wouldn't want someone else to make that decision for you anyway, right? Notice I referred to instructions; you don't get any of those here either but let's be honest; you'd have just complained that they didn't make any sense and tossed them. Think of it as helping the environment.The pictured test-case is a pair of Polk Audio T15s and apparently the "15" is a reference to their weight; 15 lbs each. Real wood has that effect. This is where people start running into problems: If you're bolting something heavier than a potted plant to a wall or ceiling, you need to put some engineering effort into it. No Chinese manufacturing company making speaker mounts alongside selfie-sticks and lawn-ornaments or whatever has time to guess at what you want to do with these things, and you wouldn't want them to. Keyhole mounts on speakers suck for any real load bearing; that's a fact of life and not the fault of the speaker mount, and depending on them alone for any speaker that's worth the effort is just stupid. The same goes for wherever you actually plan to put these; if you live in a trailer with fiberboard walls and 2x3 framing, you're not hanging your dad's old Fisher 10" house speakers on anything without voiding an insurance policy. That said, with my old gypsum walls and hardwood studs along with strategic use of geometry, 1/4" toggle-bolts *did* work. The mount has 4 holes for them, and you should use all of them if you're putting any weight up there. Of course if you can bolt them to a stud, do so; lag-bolts are a good choice for this, drywall screws are not. Again, you have to put some thought into how everything will ultimately go together. Don't hang 18 lbs off one end at a 45° angle with the connecting-bolt fully extended and blame the mount when it pulls out of the wall. In the absence of printed instructions, the picture on the box shows you everything you need to know regarding assembly. If it doesn't and basic peg/hole logic fails you, put down the hammer and get a professional on the case.I can see where one or the other mounting plate may possibly ship with a bend in it at the center. The metal is thick--all indications are it's weldable, though I can't think of a justification for doing so--but it's not titanium or cobalt and you don't want it to be. I guess you can ding the seller a star for that if you want but I have a hard time seeing how it would have any negative effect on use. Be smart with them and they'll outlive the speakers you use them with...and possibly the wall/ceiling you hang them from.
A**R
Looks good but...
It was too short to reach the beam. I'm sure it's a nice product though.
B**S
If you want to hide them further, put some heat shrink tubing or some gaff tape on the silver bolt.
Love these mounts! I was able to hang a pair of speakers from the ceiling; I built two small enclosures for the speakers out of 2x4 and plywood and hung a pair of JBL 306 studio monitors.Protip: buy some "rubber baby buggy bumpers" for the speakers if they are at head level, you'll constantly hit your noggin!
P**S
Good product
Just what I was looking for my speaker. Material is very strong. Had to remove the cover of the speaker after drilled to place the nuts inside. Excellent product. I will recommend.
I**S
Missing pieces
It came with missing screws. Couldn’t use it.
A**.
Absolutely the best I’ve used
These are by far the best ceiling mount I’ve ever used, they really hold up well and do exactly what I’ve asked them to do.
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