MS100 - Studio Monitor Stands Pair with Adjustable up to 4" Height, Triangular Metal Base for Concerts and Recordings In a professional audio environment, where your speakers sit matters just as much as the speakers themselves. The Samson MS100 ...
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In a professional audio environment, where your speakers sit matters just as much as the speakers themselves. The Samson MS100 Studio Monitor Stands Pair elevates your nearfield monitors to the optimal listening height while decoupling them from your desk surface.
By eliminating muddy desk reflections and low-end acoustic coupling, this heavy-duty pair of stands delivers a truer stereo image and a tight, accurate bass response, ensuring your mixes translate perfectly to the outside world.
Great for: Content Creation, Audio for Video, Education, Theater / Production
The Samson MS100 Studio Monitor Stands features a telescoping height adjustment from 30 to 50 inches, a secure vise-style speaker bracket, and a heavy triangular base with carpet spikes for maximum acoustic decoupling.
Setting your monitors directly on a desk causes sound waves to bounce off the flat wood surface, creating phase cancellation and a muddy frequency response. Elevating your speakers on the MS100 stands brings them directly to ear level, letting you hear crisp high-end details and balanced transients.
| Product Specifications | |
|---|---|
| Material Build: | Rugged, heavy-duty steel and metal alloy |
| Height Range: | Adjustable from 30” to 50” (76cm to 127cm) |
| Speaker Mount Design: | Adjustable, vise-style secure grip bracket |
| Base Design: | Weighted triangular footprint |
| Isolation Accessories: | Included heavy carpet spikes for decoupling |
| Best Used For: | Nearfield Studio Monitors, Home Recording, Video Editing Suites |
Acoustic Engineer Tip: For the most accurate stereo field, adjust your MS100 stands so that the monitor's tweeters sit exactly at ear height when you are in your natural mixing position. Additionally, position the two stands and your chair to form a perfect equilateral triangle (equal distances between both speakers and your head), pointing the speakers inward at a 60-degree angle.