
Flexispot - E7Q
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Based on 1 year's data from Jan 28, 2026 How it works
I bought the standard flexispot eq7 (the one with 4 legs) and built it together a few hours ago, It arrived with a "dent" just in the mouse zone and it doesn't come with holes pre-drilled, but I'm happy with how it works.
I can recommend you the Flexspot E7Q, it has 4 motors and is more stable than those T-shape desk frames.
With that budget I’d jump on the current Flexispot sale. I have an E7Q and love it but you can go with the E7 Plus or Plus Max which are totally in your budget and four legged so bye bye wobbling of any sort.
I went for a Flexispot standing desk with a walnut top (I think, a dark wood option). Thing is much bigger than I thought it'd be, but I love it, I now spend most of my day standing up.
Got one from Flexispot and while it's awesome, it turned out to be way bigger than I'd imagined. Still, highly recommended.
Flexispot is awesome quality in my experience. I’ve been very happy with mine w/ a 72 inch top. As Ok_Toe said, get the light bamboo if possible. It is awesome.
I’ve heard the dark bamboo is a hollow honeycomb design & the yellow/light bamboo is solid but .75 inches thick. I don’t know if the dark bamboo is as good, I haven’t heard bad things about it though. The tensile strength of solid bamboo is pretty awesome so I went with it for longevity.
Flexispot E7Q has been serving me well - I have it for 2 years now
Flexispot and uplift are great desks uplift being the better when it comes to motors. Which has the higher weight limit and what do the motors look like?
I got the FlexiSpot E7Q and it is way solid. I did frame only then put my own butcher block on top. I had a cheap two leg and I tried doing steps to improve it but still was not as good as going four leg. Now I am on carpet so when I got up there is a little wiggle but nothing like the old two leg.
I think Flexispot is a good choice too but Uplift has a slight edge for you because of their accessories ecosystem with the frame attachment points and the additional stability with their wedge design. If you want grommets but are unsure what to put in the grommets, there is nothing wrong with using the standard ones first.
I had some good responses with Deskhaus, Flexispot, and Uplift. Didn't really contact anybody else.
Can you use a monitor arm to lower the monitor height? If not, Flexispot's E7 goes to around 23" without a desktop but it's stability isn't as good as the E7Q.
Can you use a monitor arm to lower the monitor height? If not, Flexispot's E7 goes to around 23" without a desktop but it's stability isn't as good as the E7Q.
Personally I think it would be worth it but Flexispot is a good cheaper choice.
You’re 6'1" with a heavy setup. Forget the base E7. You need stability at height, which means a T-frame is better than a C-frame. It's between the E7 Pro and the E7Q. The E7Q is a four-leg tank. It has zero wobble, but it's overkill for 99% of people. Unless you're doing microscopic soldering on it, you don't need it. I've got an ultrawide and a vertical monitor on the E7 Pro. It's solid. Any tiny bit of movement you might notice comes from the monitor arms, not the desk frame. Save the cash, get the E7 Pro, and spend the difference on beefy monitor arms that clamp down tight. That'll give you the stability you're actually looking for.
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