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Randall Smith
Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2022
I love the sturdiness of this roller stand. What is difficult is that when you loosen the screw to adjust the height, it is hard to hold in place while you tighten the screw to fix it in place. Then, when you think it is fixed in place, it slips down. If you need to adjust it often, it is frustrating. But, it holds the outfeed boards beautifully!
J
Reviewed in the United States on December 6, 2020
Box came all broken, item was damaged and dinged. Seems like a sturdy stand, a bit hard to adjust with the Allen bolts you have to tighten, which squeeze the tube. Not impossible, but not easy to make small adjustments. Not a cheap piece of crap but could use some modifications.
Jean-Sébastien Mongrain
Reviewed in Canada on September 22, 2019
Construction robuste , mais l’ajustement n’est pas au point.
Bob Reynolds
Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2018
The stand is obviously much better than the split leg folding type of roller stand. It's heavy and sturdy, but not too heavy to easily carry around. Roller has ball bearings which should ensure long life and smooth action. Like others have stated, I wish there were some sort of holder for the wrench on the stand. The casting of the legs seems poor or unfinished. There are air pockets on the surface that left small voids; nothing serious just appearance.
Paul F. Kramer
Reviewed in the United States on November 14, 2018
I've had lots of different roller stands. All of the previous ones eventually failed. Normal failure point is the height adjustment mechanism. This one looks much better. MUCH heavier, which is great as it doesn't look like it will be easily tipped. The normal tightening mechanism is also quite different. This one utilizes an extra large Allen wrench to adjust the height. Sure it would be nice not to search for the wrench, but the types that have a lever eventually ALWAYS self destruct. This one looks MUCH better. The roller at the top is not as free rolling as some, but it appears that there is an actual bearing there. While it doesn't "spin", it moves adequately well. With the weight of the stand, I expect that this will not be a problem. So good I'm going to buy another one immediately.
konaram
Reviewed in the United States on March 24, 2017
These are heavy duty stands that would be hard to tip over. My cheap lightweight stands which had ball rollers on one side and a cylinder roller on the other side that you could flip between were so bad that I could only use them to stack things on, might as well have made two saw horses! I waxed the chrome rollers and plan to continue waxing them when ever I do my cast iron tool tables. I do not want them ruined by rust. These are not the easiest to adjust because they have a separate Allen wrench for the locking bolts. Maybe I'll weld some handles onto the bolts later if it becomes too much of a hassle but right now I just have the wrench attached to the stand with a magnet. I will update if the rollers start rusting.
G.W.
Reviewed in Canada on August 14, 2016
Good solid stands, pricey compared to V stand ( Can& 136.31 vs Can$ 89.83 for the V stand)
sgsargenttx
Reviewed in the United States on March 11, 2016
Good, heavy duty stand that will not tip over. The roller is ball bearing driven and quality seems to be pretty decent overall. The only gripe I have is that a hex key is required to make adjustments to the height; but, there's no keeper on the stand to store the key.
Lee
Reviewed in Canada on July 14, 2015
This unit is sufficiently robust to meet my needs in the wood shop, with construction techniques including some cast items providing some weight to the item. After purchasing one to investigate its quality and usefulness, I have ordered a second to replace less sturdy and cheaper units purchased in the past years. The finishing is average, however, I feel these will last and would love to upgrade to the hydraulic cylinder version. Unfortunately at the $400 + price point, I can live with the allan key to adjust the height of each unit.As a suggestion, add small magnets on the cast unit to secure the allan key for convenient and quick adjustment.Updated July 16, 2015The second Vestil Roller Stand arrived and was unpackaged and assembled.Upon assembly, I was unable to loosen the inside cylinder and had to pry open the top slot with a screwdriver to dislodge it in able to attach the roller head. The inside cylinder meanders from side to side as there is no collar or ring at the bottom of the cylinder to add additional support when it is adjusted up or down, even after tightening the allan screw at the top. That was also a problem with the first unit, just not noted. It is a better constructed unit than one can purchase at your local H.D, but could be improved with a few small modifications by the manufacturer. Quality seemed lacking with this roller stand as compared to the 1st one purchased.
Rick Brennan
Reviewed in the United States on December 7, 2013
We've used lots of roller stands for woodworking and metalworking. For this price range we're used to seeing lightweight stands that have really crappy height and level adjustment systems and cheap rollers. For the money, this is, by far, the best stand we've bought in 25 years. The stand is very heavy duty, and the fit and finish is excellent. The height adjustment lock is a split collar at the top of the stand that tightens down on a robust center column using an allen cap screw to close the collar. Very secure. We were having problems with other stands creeping down under load. Not these stands. The base is drilled for leveling feet - critical for our woodworking applications - however the holes are not threaded, and there are no feet included with the stand. No big deal as we bought heavy duty feet (over 3,000 pound capacity each) for around $12 here on Amazon, threaded the holes in the base, screwed the feet in from the bottom, put the jam nuts on from the top side, and welded another nut at the end of the threaded rod so we can adjust the feet from above and lock them with two wrenches. We ended up with a very, very good stand system with easy, quick and secure height and level adjustment. These are a joy to work with.
Alfredo
Reviewed in the United States on January 28, 2013
Stand arrived with the Height Adjustment Screw threads damaged and assembled with great forced into the Height Adjustment Clamp. Had to chase both threads to work properly. Height adjustment tube was also out-of-round on the end and would not allow the tube to fully retract to its lowest position. Filed tube round to work properly. I've been a mechanic for 50 years, and, decided to repair, rather than replace, because of possible quality control problems at the manufacturer.
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