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Mosaic displays need to show pattern and color simultaneously — two things that require different viewing distances. The 957 forward tilt lets customers see the full sheet from 2 meters and individual
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Flooring showrooms have a unique display challenge: planks look completely different horizontal versus vertical. The 52 presents samples at a 12° angle — close enough to flat for accurate color percep
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The 321 individual slot access design means you can change one mosaic sheet in seconds without touching adjacent samples. Seasonal collection updates become a 5-minute task instead of a major reorgani
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If your sales team spends more time fetching samples from the back than talking to customers, the 571 puts your entire collection at their fingertips — literally within arm’s reach of the consultation
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We engineered the 984 center of gravity 40% below the frame midpoint after studying how customers interact with stone displays. They lean slabs forward to see the polished face, and the rack must not
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Carpet showrooms face a unique issue: samples need to be touched. The 928 presents samples at hand height with enough clearance for customers to feel the pile, check the backing, and return the sample
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We manufacture the 501 in our Xiamen facility where we control every step from steel procurement to final assembly. No subcontractors, no quality gaps.
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The 920 packs flat to 15% of its assembled volume, which means it ships via standard courier to any address worldwide — no freight forwarder required for sample orders.
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The 197 packs flat to 15% of its assembled volume, which means it ships via standard courier to any address worldwide — no freight forwarder required for sample orders.
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Stone showrooms face constant tension: display more products to sell more, but do not overcrowd the space. The 373 uses a staggered front-to-back layout that shows every slab face from a single aisle.
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Showroom managers love the 701 because samples stay clean longer — the angled display means less dust settles on the tile faces, reducing daily cleaning time.
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The 825 frame uses thick-gauge steel tube because carpet rolls are heavier than they look. A full rack of densely woven commercial carpet samples can weigh over 200kg.
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Stone showrooms face constant tension: display more products to sell more, but do not overcrowd the space. The 878 uses a staggered front-to-back layout that shows every slab face from a single aisle.
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We engineered the 23 center of gravity 40% below the frame midpoint after studying how customers interact with stone displays. They lean slabs forward to see the polished face, and the rack must not m
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Every 673 ships with a printed assembly guide that uses only pictures — no English required. We have shipped to 50+ countries and the feedback on our instructions has been universally positive.
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The biggest complaint we heard from distributors was display racks that developed a ‘lean’ after 6 months. The 720 has gusseted corner plates and cross-braced rear panels that eliminate frame racking.
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The 234 was first prototyped for a Dubai-based stone importer who needed display racks that could survive in 45°C warehouse heat without the powder coat peeling. That prototype is still in service 4 y
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Stone showrooms face constant tension: display more products to sell more, but do not overcrowd the space. The 761 uses a staggered front-to-back layout that shows every slab face from a single aisle.
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Stone showrooms face constant tension: display more products to sell more, but do not overcrowd the space. The 679 uses a staggered front-to-back layout that shows every slab face from a single aisle.
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Showroom layouts change, product lines rotate, and display fixtures need to keep up. The 516 is designed for disassembly and reassembly — every connection is a bolt, not a weld, so you can reconfigure