Description
- Description
- Features
- About The Brand
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Ideal for sport and street bikes with clip-on style handlebars, the low-profile Motorcycle Stem Mount‚ now with optional Qi2 wireless charging‚ keeps your phone rigidly mounted, easily viewable, and instantly accessible. Securely installs in most hollow-center steering stem nuts using an expansion plug. Features an ultra-strong magnetic/mechanical mounting technology (called SlimLink™) that grabs, locks, and charges (optional) your phone so effortlessly, it feels like magic. Attach your phone in portrait or landscape, and remove it instantly with the press of a button‚ even with riding gloves on. A rigid adjustment arm lets you customize your phone position and viewing angle. Best-in-class vibration isolator prevents phone damage, yet preserves enough stiffness so you can easily interact with your phone while mounted. Weatherproof machined and anodized aluminum construction with stainless steel fasteners.
Requires a Peak Design Case or Universal Adapter (sold separately). Qi2 charging version comes with a waterproof USB-C cable that requires a USB-C power source. Due to waterproofing, cable is not removable. Adapters to USB-A and SAE (direct-to-battery) cables sold separately.
Don’t have clip-on style bars? Get the Motorcycle Bar Mount.
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Dimensions
Non-Charging Mount Head: 5.6cm x 5.6cm x 1.33cm (2.2″ x 2.2″ x 0.52″)
Arm length (tip to tip): 5.65cm (2.2″)
Arm width: 2cm (0.8″)
Arm height 1.8cm (0.7″)
Weight
Non-Charging: 126.1g
Fits Stem Diameters:
13-20mm
20-26mm
Materials & Sustainability
Machined/anodized aluminum mounting head, arm, base, and expansion plugs
Grippy silicone mounting pad with Tinuvin 770 UV-stabilizer
PVD coated stainless steel hardware
Silicone vibration dampers
High-temp neodymium mounting magnets
What’s In The Box
(1) Motorcycle Stem Mount
(2) Expansion Plug Wedges (install larger wedge for wider stem nuts)
(1) 4mm hex wrench
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In 2010, a fresh-faced, Minnesota-born, good-to-know-ya fella named Peter Dering went on a 4-month trip around the world. During this trip he learned that carrying a DSLR camera is a pain in the touchis. He returned to his San Francisco apartment and did what any responsible person would do: quit his nice job and spent 10 months designing a little thingy-dingy for carrying cameras. In May 2011 Peter launched that thingy-dingy (we now call it Capture) on a fledgling website called Kickstarter. It worked, and Peak Design was born. Peter started hiring friends, friends of friends, and random people he met at concerts. Peak Design got itself a little office in San Francisco’s Dogpatch neighborhood.
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