Mount-It! TV Wall Mount Bracket with Full Motion Arm Fits 13-42” Flat Screen TVs VESA 75, 100, 200, 55lb Weight Capacity WITH 15" EXTENSION

Mount-It! TV Wall Mount Bracket with Full Motion Arm Fits 13-42” Flat Screen TVs VESA 75, 100, 200, 55lb Weight Capacity WITH 15" EXTENSION
Mount-It! TV Wall Mount Bracket with Full Motion Arm Fits 13-42” Flat Screen TVs VESA 75, 100, 200, 55lb Weight Capacity WITH 15" EXTENSION
Mount-It! TV Wall Mount Bracket with Full Motion Arm Fits 13-42” Flat Screen TVs VESA 75, 100, 200, 55lb Weight Capacity WITH 15" EXTENSION
Mount-It! TV Wall Mount Bracket with Full Motion Arm Fits 13-42” Flat Screen TVs VESA 75, 100, 200, 55lb Weight Capacity WITH 15" EXTENSION
Mount-It! TV Wall Mount Bracket with Full Motion Arm Fits 13-42” Flat Screen TVs VESA 75, 100, 200, 55lb Weight Capacity WITH 15" EXTENSION
Mount-It! TV Wall Mount Bracket with Full Motion Arm Fits 13-42” Flat Screen TVs VESA 75, 100, 200, 55lb Weight Capacity WITH 15" EXTENSION
Mount-It! TV Wall Mount Bracket with Full Motion Arm Fits 13-42” Flat Screen TVs VESA 75, 100, 200, 55lb Weight Capacity WITH 15" EXTENSION

Key features

  • ARTICULATING TV WALL MOUNT - Articulating arms offer full motion capability. Swivel 180 degrees, Rotation 360 degrees, Tilt 15 degrees up and down
  • VESA COMPATIBLE - Fits 75x75, 100x100, 200x100, 200x200 Up to 55 lbs. Ideal for small to mid-sized TVs
  • UNIVERSAL TV BRACKET - Compatible with all the TVs in the market with VESA patterns of 75 (3" x 3") to 200 (8" x 8") bolt hole patterns. This pattern is typically suitable for 27, 29, 30, 32, 37, 40, 42 and even some 47, 50 and 55 Inch TVs.
  • EXTENSION WITH LONG ARM - Extends up to 15 inches away from the wall. Ideal for corner installations or as a monitor wall mount.
  • EASY INSTALLATION - Removable Plate allows the mount and TV to be installed separately - perfect for outdoors. Hardware and Instruction Manual Included.
Size23" - 47"
ColorBlack

Mount-It! TV Wall Mount Bracket with Full Motion Arm Fits 13-42” Flat Screen TVs VESA 75, 100, 200, 55lb Weight Capacity WITH 15" EXTENSION

List Price: $36.84$33.16DEALYou Save: $3.68 (10%)
Free shippingFree Returns – 30 daysFree Order CancellationSecure Payment2–3 Days DeliveryGet It June 22, 2026In Stock (1)No marketing spamNo account requiredFulfilment by FedEx / Amazon / UPS / ShipwirePayPal / Card Buyer Protection

Customer Reviews

Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers
3.9
out of 5
Based on 10 reviews
5
50%
4
10%
3
30%
2
0%
1
10%
Not designed for a TV (likely for a computer monitor)
Dan Diego✓ Verified PurchaseFebruary 20, 2018
I wasn't impressed with this "TV" mount.

1. It's tiny! Yes, it's well made and will likely support the 27" TV, but it doesn't appear to be made for a TV at all...more like a computer monitor.

2. The mounting holes are only about 3"-4" apart which didn't match my TV at all. Couldn't be used without major modifications.

3. Their website isn't helpful at all. O TV models were "available," only computer monitors...which leads me to believe that this isn't designed as a TV mount at all.

Spend a bit more and get a better mount specifically made for a TV.
Very Small and LIGHT duty
EdCaffreyMS✓ Verified PurchaseFebruary 4, 2018
For the money, and the right application this item is OK.

This mount is OK for SMALL monitors or TV..... mainly due to the fact that the maximum vesa mount is 100x100. No additional sizing parts are included.
The articulation is VERY stiff....requiring both hands and a firm grip.
The biggest drawback I found with this item is the way methodology the vesa is mounted to the arm..... kind of a "ball and socket" arrangement. Very unstable, rotates easily unless you REALLY clamp the nut down tight.....the issue there is that in order to tighten the nut, you've gotta get back there...and that means extending the arm all the way outward, and then hoping you got everything where you want it BEFORE/While you tighten the nut. Not a very well thought out or executed idea.
This is a very great mount for the sizes suggested
D. Whaley✓ Verified PurchaseJanuary 3, 2018
This is a very great mount for the sizes suggested. It had extensions you would screw on if the alignment holes weren't on the standard mount. Very minimal effort involved and it's extremely sturdy and the adjustments and movements are excellent! I mounted my parents 48" TV using this mount in a matter of about 15-20 minutes. I highly recommend this unit if you are wanting to mount your TV on the wall and are wanting a flexible amount of viewing angles! Thanks for an awesome product at a great price!
Read the Directions and Avoid E-Shots or Prepare to Placate the Spirits of Your Ancestors!
Cam✓ Verified PurchaseDecember 4, 2017
This is a great mount for the price! But guys, seriously, read the instructions!

Installation. This is the devil's own TV mount. I mean, if, perchance, you have a wall of 1" plywood to screw into, it would be easy, but if you have drywall, or 100 year old plaster and lath like we do, you're going to need a stud-finder...

The story: I have a teenage boy. He's a gamer, or aspires to be, but I refuse to spend vast amounts of money on video games, so he has to buy his own. One thing I do spend money on is RockSmith, because the kid has been playing guitar for not quite three years and he's freaking phenomenal. He had a TV and a monitor, but of course yearned for a bigger TV, so my dad bought a new one and gave him the older 42" flat panel and now there was no room for it on the desk. He then pestered me for a month to buy him a wall mount. (Honestly, this has to be the heaviest LCD I have ever seen, and I ain't no weak little girl!) I resisted buying the TV mount, because I've been meaning to repaint his room and we live in my grandparents' 100 year old house and the walls are all plaster. My whole life I was trained to NEVER, EVER put holes in the plaster walls! You hang stuff on the anchors that are already there. If you put a hole in a wall, it better be forever - that curtain rod, painting, mirror, commemorative plate, etc. is going to stay there FOREVER. If it's not the right size and shape for where the screw is, you hang it somewhere else! And you better have a whopping drill, because the wall studs are all aged oak, which is roughly the hardness of, well, a ROCK. But the hubby has a hammer-drill, and he's managed to conduct all sorts of repairs on my grandfather's pre-civil war era timber-framed barn, so I figured, how badly wrong could this possibly go? Even with the hubby's (frustrating) over-indulgence of energy drinks, which tend to make him scatter-brained in the evening, and the screenager's ADHD, emphasis on the "H," and their tendency to feed each others manic mood when both confined to the same small space. Mounting TVs is the hubby and the screenager's monkey, not mine. So I ordered the mount that I thought any teenager would die for - this one.

I ordered it on Thursday morning, which means with Prime two-day (more like three or four-day) shipping, it was due to arrive on Monday. I made the mistake of telling the teenager I had ordered it, to get him to leave me alone, but then he just pestered me for tracking information all weekend. Monday arrived and he must have checked the front step 22 times for packages, scolding the outside cat, who happens to be the exact color of a package and likes to lay on the steps and impersonate a package because he knows we can't tell the difference through the beveled glass door.

The package arrived, and immediately he threw packing material all over the living room and dumped the other contents onto the sofa so he could get a look at the box the mount came in. I wouldn't let him open it, because immature frontal lobes apparently have trouble NOT losing small parts. Then he had to wait until dad, who doesn't work on Mondays, came in from disassembling and reassembling the barn, so they could install it. I left them to it. Bad idea.

Soon, I notice a lot of tromping up and down the stairs. I can hear a lot of traipsing in and out of the attic door, I assume to get a look at the other side of the wall. I hear drilling and banging and cursing. There is some discussion that the mount won't tilt - they shove it in my face - at which point I ask if they even looked at the instructions, reach for the box, which is still on the sofa and discover the pristine, never unfolded instruction book inside the box, which I then quite satisfyingly wave in their sheepish faces while pointing at the diagram that explains how to tilt the mount. So I finally go upstairs. Bad idea.

Not only is there a dime-sized hole in the plaster where the existing picture-hanging screw had been for sixty years, There are two more, slightly smaller, large holes below it, pencil marks everywhere, plaster chips everywhere, and dirty paper plates and half empty water bottles and soda cans and chip bags everywhere, which is normal, but still ticks me off. The holes are slightly too far to the left and missed the stud. Because drilling into the rock hard studs takes a larger bit, they had to use larger screws than the ones provided and so the holes are larger than usual. As I stand there, the hubby drills TWO MORE HOLES in my grandmother's plaster and I can literally feel her rolling over in her grave, ready to break out and snatch them both bald. And by now they're so irritable and frazzled they almost mount it upside-down before I stop them. (But to be fair, I'm pretty sure they would have noticed before they started screwing it to the wall... I hope...)

And now we have to LIFT the thirty-five pound TV over the desk and hinge it onto the mount, without the he-man who is lifting it being able to actually see what he's doing. In case you didn't know, the laws of physics are such that when you hold a thirty-five pound TV at a distance from your body, over $300 of smaller monitors and keyboards and controllers and several open cans of sugary, citric-acid-y beverages, my precious season 5 Game of Thrones DVD box set which the screenager is not supposed to TOUCH, it will suddenly weigh 2,000 pounds. It's true. Ask Stephen Hawking.

After several very tense moments with the screenager and I standing on tiptoe, stretched over the desk with our faces pressed against the wall, trying to guide the 4,000 pound TV onto the tiny hinge, EUREKA! SUCCESS! WHEW!

So the TV is securely attached to the wall, and has been for about two weeks without falling off. You can tilt it, angle it and rotate it 90 degrees, which is a good thing, because now the hubby has a lot of plaster patching to do. Some offerings to the spirits of my ancestors would be wise. Grandpa prefers pie.
Quality construction, horizontal length helps to center a TV
Charles C.✓ Verified PurchaseNovember 18, 2017
I needed to mount my TV in a place where there is a wall stud pretty much dead center of where I need the TV. If I were to mount my TV on a swinging arm with one fixed installation point this might work, but I don't like the idea of a hinge mount for a big TV. The length of this mount allows me to offset the centering of the wall mount between two wall studs that are 24" apart, and to align the TV where I need it to be.

Basically, I fixed the right end of the wall mount over the right wall stud, and the left side of the wall mount went several inches past the left wall stud. I was then able to hang my TV toward the left end of the wall mount, and this centered it perfectly over my shelf (moving the shelf itself was not an option here). You can see some of the wall mount sticking out to the right side behind my TV, but this is a complete non issue for me as it was more important to center the TV.

The wall mount and brackets that attach to the back of the TV seem to be of good quality, and the hardware (screws and bolts) have given me no issue. So far everything is holding up, and it's clear that this mount could hold a TV far heavier than mine. I'm confident that it will hold mine until it needs to be replaced and couldn't recommend this product more.
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