Here's another handy little hint for you. If you need to present a microphone stand from a musician side. If they're a keyboard player, for example, particularly playing a piano, then it's always a good idea to put the stand on the musicians, right. Let me just adjust this a little bit here, make it a little bit higher and do the clutch and get a nice angle on the boom under the little locking nut tear locking bolt even. And now the reason that I have done the microphone that I've presented the microphone stand up from the musicians right, is that the gravity, the weight of the microphone is now doing the thread between the mic stand and the microphone clip is doing the thread up. Rather than presenting it the other way, which would be causing gravity to naturally undo the thread, therefore leading to a potentially faulty stand, particularly as musicians have a tendency to actually push the microphone with their lips when they're stinging into it.
So let me show you what's likely to happen. If we have a standards presented from the other side, then it's up nice and tight and it's high good, not a good push. There it is. You see now if I'm playing an instrument, I can't do anything about that microphone except transferring into it like that, which isn't really very comfortable at all. So there it is. Always try and present the microphone in such a way as it's tightening itself.
The stand is tightening itself, the weight of the microphone gravity, all of that rather than the other way around. As you can see, this is not a good result.