






🚀 Elevate Your Desk Game!
The Stand Up Desk Store Adjustable CPU Desktop Computer Tower Holder is designed to optimize your workspace by securely mounting your CPU under your desk. With tool-free adjustments for height and width, it fits a variety of CPU sizes while providing protection against shocks and scratches. Made from durable powder-coated steel, it supports up to 30 lbs and is easy to install with included hardware.








B**N
Best under-desk PC mount I've found - the adjustments will not slip!
I've tried a couple under desk mounts and while others were a little cheaper, they were a lot poorly made and couldn't support the size of my PC case (Fractal Meshify mid). This one is heavy and solid. It does not flex the way others did.I made a couple of improvements to make it work better for my setup:- Replaced the four hand knob adjusters with set screws that sit flush with the body of the mount. These hand knobs are M8x1.25mm thread, and I found 16mm length was just about right. My local hardware store had these for 70 cents each, and the upgrade was well worth the sub $3 cost. This makes it so the adjusters are tightened with an allen key / hex driver instead but it really streamlines the assembly.- Chose a better fastener for attaching to my desk. The kit comes with four fat phillips head screws to attach the mount under your desk. I wanted something a bit more overbuilt. Also the holes in the housing for the screws are about 3/8" diameter so most screws could benefit from some washers to spread the load out / not slip through the housing. I ended up needing to make a spacer so the mount plate would clear the frame of my desk, and used 2.5"x0.25" Spax lags to attach the mount to my desk. I could probably do pullups on the thing now and it's not going anywhere.Last a couple thoughts about things other folks complained about in other reviews: the perception the way the adjusters tighten could lead the mount to slip, and the way the top plate contacts the top of the PC (edge curved towards the top of your PC rather than having a flat plate on top to clamp down onto your PC). I don't think the mount is going to slip. You don't need to overtighten the adjusters to have them lock into the groves of the adjustment slides. Also, these grooves do not run the full length of the vertical support bars, so even if the adjusters were under-tightened and things slipped, the vertical supports would stop before being able to fall out. It's just not going to happen.As for the top part of the mount that sort of curves down towards the top of the PC, I'm guessing this is intentional so there can be airflow at the top of the PC. If there was just a horizontal plate at the top of the mount, it could block off any ventilation panels at the top. There also doesn't need to be a horizontal plate to clamp against, as long as the vertical and horizontal adjustments are snug, the PC isn't going to tip out or go anywhere.In short, this mount rips, and so far is one of the best options out there if you're willing to shell out a little more over the cheapo options on here.
A**A
Flexible and sturdy
I got this in order to mount a 13 lbs MicroATX Case (Corsair Obsidian 350D) under a standing desk. It's a shallow (2') and single-motor desk so there is a transverse rotating shaft under the center such that the mount lip that comes down to secure the top doesn't let the computer clear it. The computer is also offset from the mount toward the back as the top of the holder plate has to clear the shaft as well. With center of gravity well toward the back (power supply, GPU, double-tower CPU cooler, and no mechanical drives), I shimmed it against the top plate and it is very stable.Placement and modifications are no fault of the design. It's as compact and flexible as possible while remaining sturdy. In fact, it's the best design for my situation as everything else would have run into the shaft. The tool-less adjustability in both relevant directions is very convenient as I've been doing a lot of un-mounting to get the cabling right.It looks great in a clean understated way. From the short side it's a solid black plate with rounded top. On the other side it's an H with knobs. I put that on the side no one usually sees. Honestly if you're not looking that hard it looks like the case is floating. I don't have windowed panels or lights but that makes the effect even better.It came with #8 3/4" truss head wood screws which was good for my situation (especially since the table top is 1"). If you have a heavier case I'd think about using different screws and possibly adding more.
C**E
Sturdy, but not made for all cases
It works great, though it doesn't handle case depth that well. My case is 15" deep, and the feet of it hang off past the edges of this mount. Granted the case isn't at risk of falling, but I would still like to see the feet be supported.Also try to get the right position first time. I had to adjust it after setting up my desk, and couldn't be bothered to get desk down to fix it, so it was a real pain holding this up against gravity while screwing it into desk. Don't be like me :)
T**O
Great for medium size cases
My pc is the Lenovo Legion pre-built. It's 8"x15"x17" and weighs 26 pounds. The mount is more than capable of supporting the weight of this unit without any perceptible lean when mounted on a standing desk, which was the most important part for me.The included screws were far less than sufficient, so I swapped them for five1-1/2" wood screws with washers and two 1" wood screws without washers (I drilled 3 extra holes, call me paranoid). The steel was difficult to drill through with a steel bit, so I think the materials should hold up.I recommend using some blue loctite on the 4 knobs used to hold everything together and you should be good to go.I'm sure this thing, with the way I've (over) installed it, would easily hold twice the weight I've subjected it to. I could almost hang off of it before I slid my pc into the slot. Your only caviat would be pc's that are much wider than mine; they might throw off the center of gravity and cause the whole thing to lean to the left, but I sincerely doubt it.Enjoy!
J**S
Installed, but with some minor changes.
Mounted under the desk, but I added some minor changes to it. The induvial screws that come with this do NOT hold it in place. Originally the bracket only comes with 4 spots to mount it. I drilled some extra spots down the center of the metal to give some better support. So went from 4 mounting spots to 7. Also switched the screws out with some heavy-duty bolts, pre-drilled my desk, and then installed without any issue.The end results it's pretty sturdy and holds my pc in place.P.S. The small screw that is in the pictures is what it comes with, the larger one is what I replaced it with.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
3 weeks ago