Independent reviews and head-to-head comparisons of monitor arms — Ergotron LX/HX, Fully Jarvis, Herman Miller Flo, Humanscale M-series. Mount specs, VESA compatibility, clamp depth, and load capacity explained.
Dual-monitor home office setups have three viable mount configurations — single-post dual arms, two separate arms, and a single arm with a stacking adapter. Here's which is right for which use case, and the weight-balance and viewing-angle pitfalls.
Ergotron makes three of the best single-monitor arms on the market — the LX, HX, and MX. They look similar, cost differently, and serve different displays. Here's a head-to-head on capacity, reach, and the curved-monitor caveats.
A buyer's guide for monitor arms. Weight capacity, reach, joint type, mount style, and the specific compatibility checks that turn a 'good enough' arm into the right one for your setup.
VESA is the universal monitor mount standard — and the source of half the mount-compatibility confusion in home office builds. Here's what the 75×75, 100×100, 200×200 patterns mean, when you need an adapter, and the curved-monitor caveats.
The three premium single-monitor arms most knowledge workers consider — Herman Miller Flo Plus, Humanscale M2.1, and Ergotron LX. We test joint smoothness, sag over time, and which arm to spend extra for.
A keyboard tray drops your keyboard 2–4 inches below the desktop, fixing wrist angle issues that a desk-height adjustment alone can't solve. Here's when you need one, the four mount types, and the surprising number of buyers who can skip the tray entirely.