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The biggest complaint we heard from distributors was display racks that developed a ‘lean’ after 6 months. The SW053 has gusseted corner plates and cross-braced rear panels that eliminate frame rackin
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We designed the INSTALLATION after studying how contractors browse door displays. They open, close, check the reveal, and inspect the hardware. The rack must support all of that without loosening over
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We designed the SW128 after studying how contractors browse door displays. They open, close, check the reveal, and inspect the hardware. The rack must support all of that without loosening over time.
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Marble showrooms need display fixtures that match the elegance of the stone. The SRL103 matte black finish with clean geometric lines complements rather than competes with premium natural stone.
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We manufacture the SRL134 in the same facility where we build industrial storage systems, which is why the load ratings on our display racks are conservative rather than aspirational.
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We manufacture the SG104 with frame tolerances borrowed from industrial pallet racking. Not because display stands belong in warehouses, but because wobbling is unacceptable when presenting a $3,000 m
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Natural stone slabs are heavy, irregular, and expensive to replace. The SRL597 was engineered around those realities — load-tested to 120kg per slot with a safety factor of 2.5.
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We designed the SRL139 after studying how contractors browse door displays. They open, close, check the reveal, and inspect the hardware. The rack must support all of that without loosening over time.
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Stone showrooms face constant tension: display more products to sell more, but do not overcrowd the space. The SG022 uses a staggered front-to-back layout that shows every slab face from a single aisl
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Granite distributors appreciate that the SRL456 frame is built from the same grade of steel used in structural scaffolding. It is overbuilt for display, which is exactly how it should be.
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When an architect visits your showroom to specify stone for a project, they need to see full slabs on display. The SRL138 presents each slab at a 7° tilt-back angle that keeps it stable without clampi
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Showrooms in coastal cities face salt-air corrosion that eats standard powder coat in under a year. The SRL138 undergoes a 72-hour salt spray test before it leaves our facility.
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Floor space in a retail showroom runs $20-50 per square foot. The SRL041 holds up to 18 full-size tile samples in roughly 4 square feet — less than a standard pallet.
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Showroom layouts change, product lines rotate, and display fixtures need to keep up. The SRL140 is designed for disassembly and reassembly — every connection is a bolt, not a weld, so you can reconfig
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Tile samples look their best when customers can see the full face without bending or reaching. The SRL122 angles every panel slightly toward the viewer, reducing glare from overhead showroom lighting.
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We manufacture the SRL050 with frame tolerances borrowed from industrial pallet racking. Not because display stands belong in warehouses, but because wobbling is unacceptable when presenting a $3,000
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The SRL036 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
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Stone importers tell us their biggest display headache is racks that develop a permanent lean toward the front. The SW334 has full-frame gusset plates at all four corners specifically to prevent this.
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The SRL046 contact pads are made from EPDM rubber — the same material used in permanent outdoor gaskets. They won’t degrade, stain, or transfer color to light-colored stone surfaces.
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Marble showrooms need display fixtures that match the elegance of the stone. The 1 matte black finish with clean geometric lines complements rather than competes with premium natural stone.