Two Screens, One Stainless Stand at the Inspection Bench

Two Screens, One Stainless Stand at the Inspection Bench

Two Screens, One Stainless Stand at the Inspection Bench

Hup Hing fabricates stainless steel Double Monitor Stand units for inspection benches, cleanroom operator stations and production control areas where two screens must stay stable without cluttering the work surface. The useful question is not whether the stand can hold two monitors, but whether the base frame, VESA plates, post height, cable route and wipe-down finish match the real bench. For QA rooms, laboratory support desks and manufacturing lines, a stainless stand keeps visual data close to the operator while leaving the tabletop clear for samples, tools or paperwork.

Angled stainless steel double monitor stand showing two vertical posts, square mounting plates and a lower open shelf
The twin posts should be planned around the operator’s eye line and the actual bench depth.

Why does a dual-screen bench need a metal stand instead of two desktop arms?

Desktop monitor arms often work in offices, but production benches face different forces. Operators lean over trays, wipe surfaces, move instruments and sometimes pull cables during maintenance, so the screen support should be tied to the bench structure instead of sitting as a loose accessory.

The real Hup Hing Double Monitor Stand uses a brushed stainless two-tier frame with a flat upper shelf, lower open shelf, square tube legs and two polished vertical posts. Each post carries a square mounting plate with corner holes and smaller inner holes, giving a clear fixing point for monitor brackets while keeping the stainless construction easy to inspect.

Design pointPractical specification to confirmEffect at the workstation
Material gradeSUS304 for many indoor cleanroom, lab and production benches; SUS316 if stronger chemical wipe-down or corrosion risk is expectedMatches the stand to detergent, humidity and room cleanliness requirements
Mounting platesSquare stainless plates drilled to the monitor bracket or VESA-style hole patternPrevents field drilling and keeps both screens level
Post and framePolished round posts welded or bolted to a folded stainless top with square tube supportsControls vibration when operators touch the monitor or bench
FinishHairline brushed stainless with deburred folded edges and neat TIG-welded bracketsMakes routine cleaning easier and reduces sharp contact points

How high should the monitor plates sit above the work surface?

Start from the operator’s normal standing or seated eye line, then check whether the screen blocks the bench task. If the plates sit too low, the operator bends the neck; if they sit too high, the lower edge of the monitor may hide tools, trays or inspection samples.

Screen height should also leave enough room for cable bends behind the mounting plates. A stainless post can be made to the required height, but the final drawing should show monitor size, bracket depth and whether the bench will face a wall, window, machine guard or aisle.

Front view of brushed stainless steel double monitor stand with two square mounting plates above a two-level bench frame
Plate height, bench depth and cable clearance should be drawn together, not guessed after installation.
The stand is specified well when the monitor fixing pattern, operator eye line and stainless bench structure are treated as one assembly.

VESA hole pattern, cable route and bench depth decide the final drawing

A monitor stand becomes troublesome when the hole pattern is close but not exact. Buyers should confirm the VESA pattern, screw size, monitor weight and bracket depth before fabrication, especially when screens are supplied by another vendor.

Cable routing is equally practical. Some benches only need a neat rear exit, while others need clips, a cable slot or a protected route so power and signal lines do not cross the working area. Hup Hing’s product page describes the Double Monitor Stand as a stainless steel industrial workstation monitor stand for manufacturing facilities, production lines, laboratories, cleanrooms, food processing plants and pharmaceutical industries.

What finish is easier to keep clean around screens and brackets?

A hairline brushed finish suits many industrial benches because fingerprints and light wiping marks are less obvious than on a mirror surface. Around the post brackets, welded pads and plate holes, the key is smooth deburring rather than decorative shine.

Hup Hing is trusted since 1980 and has over 40 years of custom steel product manufacturing experience for industrial, commercial, medical and surgical sectors. Useful references include the Double Monitor Stand product page, Hup Hing’s Our Products listing and the company background on About Us.

Cleaning reminder: do not let the screen mount become the dirt trap

Keep a small clearance behind each monitor so staff can wipe the post, mounting plate and rear cable area. If the stand is placed against a wall or machine guard, leave enough access for cleaning without removing the screens every time.

For a buildable quotation, send the monitor model, VESA hole pattern, monitor weight, preferred screen height, bench footprint and cleaning routine to WhatsApp / Phone +6016-330 2905, or email [email protected]. Hup Hing can then review the stainless grade, post height, plate drilling, bench frame and finish for your Malaysia-wide project enquiry.

Can the stand be built for different monitor sizes?

Yes. Monitor size, weight and VESA hole pattern should be confirmed first so the mounting plates and post spacing are fabricated correctly.

Is SUS304 enough for a cleanroom operator bench?

Often yes for indoor cleanroom and lab support areas, while SUS316 should be discussed for stronger chemical wipe-down, high humidity or stricter corrosion control.

Trusted since 1980, Kilang Kejenteraan Hup Hing Sdn Bhd offers custom stainless steel fabrication, cleanroom, lab, hospital, kitchen, and industrial equipment in Negeri Sembilan, Malaysia.

Posted by Kilang Kejenteraan Hup Hing Sdn Bhd on 13 Jul 26