Made with a stave from a renowned distillery out of the Kentucky bourbon trail!
Distilleries include Makers Mark, Heaven Hill, and Jack Daniels
Mounting holes are 32" apart for convenient mounting to wall studs. The full stave measures 35” long and between 2.5”-4.5” wide
Each is given 3 coats of gloss polyurethane or two coats of matte oil to bring out the rich oak grains!
Screws and black wooden buttons are included for the mounting process
Holds four guitars, basses, violins, mandolins, banjos, or ukuleles
The holders rotate 180 degrees so that your instruments can hang left, right, or centered (if space allows)
Ships within 48 hours of your order, arrives in just 1-4 days
Optional LED Back-Light Information:
5ft of LEDs line the back and are controlled by 3 different buttons located on the back of the hanger, no external remote. The lights are battery operated by three AA batteries (not included) and the battery box is held with velcro for easy removal when it's time to change batteries. 20 color options and 8 levels of brightness/speed. It can stay static on one color or rotate between all 20. Watch video for demonstration. Works great for mine! Message with any questions.
Whiskey Barrel Stave 4 Guitar Hanger
- Find studs in the wall that you plan to mount to. Standard studs are 16" apart, so you will need one in between the two you mount into.
- Hold the guitar holder on the wall with one of the mounting holes over the center of the stud. When it's where you want it, measure from the cieling down to the hole and mark the wall in that spot.
- With the guitar holder on a flat surface, put the 2" screws provided, into 1/4" into each mounting hole to get them started.
- Place the guitar holder back on the wall and drill the screw through your mark, into the stud.
- As you hold the other side up, measure down the same distance from the cieling and/or put a level on the middle of the guitar holder to ensure that it is level.
- When drilling both screws, make sure that you constantly feel tension as it drills into the wall. If it goes in too easy, you may have missed the stud.
- Black Buttons: These are meant to be tight. If they don't press in by hand, simply get it started, cover button with a cloth, and lightly hit with a hammer or mallet.