This Ergo Stand from Wacom is designed for the Cintiq Pro 24. With it, you can easily raise, tilt, and rotate the Cintiq Pro to your preferred viewing angle.
- Designed for Wacom Cintiq Pro 24
- Raise, Tilt, and Rotate
Wacom ACK62801K Overview
Wacom ACK62801K Specs
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Wacom ACK62801K Reviews
Perfect for use with a sit/stand desk.
Incredibly solid, no wiggling. I like arms, but the Cintiq Pro 24 is a quite heavy. This gives you the feeling that it is anchored to a brick- much more like you are drawing on paper on a desk, if that is your goal (it was mine). No movement with hand pressure on the screen.
It's a MONSTER!
The box this stand comes in is the size of a NYC two bedroom apartment. And it's HEAVY!!! It has to be, obviously, because it has to counter-balance the considerable weight of the Cintiq. Assembly is an hour-and-a-half project, roughly. Especially fitting the cables into the tunnels inside the side bars is finicky, and I wish it was more easily reversible. Warning: You won't be able to easily remove your Cintiq and use it flat on a table. The holder part that rests in the stand is screwed to the back of the Cintiq. With it mounted, you won't be able to put the Cintiq on a table. And removing it is not something you'll quickly do on a whim. So you're pretty much stuck using this stand at all times. You need generous desk space if you want a maximum of options. For a product with the word ERGO in its name, I sure developed some shoulder problems quickly! Now, this may be fixable with a better, higher office chair. I'm just saying: This thing won't automatically provide your ideal work position. Importantly, you can't go BELOW a certain position. You won't be able to mimic the Cintiq's flat position (the way it would be without a stand), it will always be a couple of inches higher than that. I removed the casters from my desk, which brought the whole table top down a couple of inches, and now it's pretty good. (And by pretty good, I mean pretty good the way Larry David says it.) I'm NOT in love. The bottom hinges only have two locking positions: All the way up, or all the way down. Any additional adjustments have to be made with the two handles on the sides of the top hinge, which requires quite a bit of wrist strength. With that, you can achieve monitor status or almost-flat work position, but not a heck of a lot in between. Fun while drawing: You can rotate the entire screen clockwise or counter-clockwise if needed. Frankly, I don't use that feature much (Photoshop has rotation built in, why would I fool around with this huge contraption?). So --- my advice after the first couple of weeks would be to get the Cintiq without this thing first and see how you like it that way. Enjoy! If you buy this at the store, don't expect to take it home on the subway. Did I mention it's gigantic?