The garage is so much less messy with the bikes out of the way! This holder is very sturdy yet also lets us easily swing the bikes out of the way if necessary.My dad wanted a place to store his high wheeler bike and we need just the right wall mount. And we found it!Easy to install and hold my bikes well. Mt bikes have been hanging on them for a few weeks and they haven't shown any signs of bending.Would have been a solid product if the rubber clamp was sturdier. The clamp broke at first use, making the extension arm useless. Wish they will update this and get away from the rubber clamp.Great for organizing the garage and getting the bikes off the floor.I'm using this as a stand for working on bikes. Of course it also works fine for storage, and it will be a lot easier to get the bike up on this mount than hoisting it up on those J-hooks you sometimes see.As you can see in the photos, I've attached it to a 2x4, which is in turn attached to a stud behind the visible pegboard. The weight of the bike will tend to pull whatever it's attached to over, so make sure you're attaching it to something sturdy. (In my case, the very top of the 2x4 is just the other side of a ceiling joist, so it's not going anywhere.)The rack comes with screws (more than you'll need), and large plastic anchors that the screws go into if you want to mount it on masonry or concrete. Since I mounted it on wood, I didn't need the anchors. You'll use two of the four screw holes in the top--the inner two for mounting to studs, the outer two for mounting to masonry. You'll see some similar mounts from other manufacturers on Amazon, but at least at the moment, the competitors use only half the mounting screws. I therefore trust this Phunaya brand more.The instructions say to drill 5/64" holes in the stud (and 5/16" holes in masonry, for which you'll need a masonry bit). I'm pretty sure that's a typo; I'd suggest at least a 5/32" drill, and maybe larger. Even with that, my high torque screw driver was stuttering--I can't imagine screwing the screws in by hand with a 5/32" hole. (The instructions refer to "iron" screws--obviously they mean steel.)The first time I mounted it, I didn't take into account the fact that the red hangers dip, and as a result the wheels were touching the ground. Back to the drawing board! For the street bike in the picture, the top holes in the bracket are now just under 40" above the floor, which gives me about 3" clearance under the wheels. If this is for a mountain bike, you can mount it lower.If--like me--you plan to use this while working on the bike, the rear brake cable may hang up on the mount (on my bike, that cable runs near the bottom of the top tube). So when adjusting the rear brake, you may need to take your bike off the mount. I think that's the case with virtually all bike work stands I've seen, not just this one. Since you adjust the brake cables statically (without spinning the wheels), that's no problem. At least on my bike, the rack doesn't interfere with any of the other cables, so you can spin the pedals and adjust the derailleur cables just fine.One slight drawback: the red part rotates inside the black part to allow for different angled top tubes. The downside is that it's hard to keep it from rotating when you don't want it to. It tightens using two clamping screws, and it's hard to get those tight enough that the red part doesn't rotate slightly under load. I don't think that's a biggie. (The screws tighten with a supplied Allen wrench--I store mine by sticking it in a hole in the pegboard you see in the picture. You could drill a small hole in the stud to store it.)In sum, I think this will work well for what I wanted. The mount sticks out from the wall plenty far to allow the pedals on my bike to rotate, and it seems super sturdy. And if you're just using it to store the bike, you can push the red part all the way in to keep the bike closer to the wall (you'll likely be limited by the handlebars, not the mount).These bike racks are a fantastic upgrade to help keep the garage a little less cluttered. I’ve used hooks from the ceiling and tried storing the bikes at different angles and different locations around the garage. There really has never been a GOOD spot to store them.I installed these and I noticed an immediate difference in the way the garage felt/looked. I think it’s the stacking of one rack on top of the other, so the two bikes just take up the space of one that is the key. And with the bottom bike being off the floor, helps to keep the bike from falling over and MUCH easier to clean around it.The install was very straight forward. The mounting hardware that the racks come with is nice and beefy. The two different hole options on the rack are nice too. I used the four inner holes to make sure I got the lag bolts in to the stud. I did have to angle the bolts slightly, but I really wanted to make sure they were in the stud.For my bikes, large size mountain bikes, the handlebars are around 750mm wide (about 30 inches with grips) and was just a bit too wide to allow the front wheel to be straight. The mount arms are adjustable, and I could probably extend them a bit more, but I really wanted to make sure they were secure. I solved this by first mounting a piece of 3/4 inch plywood to the wall, then bolted the mounts through the plywood directly to the stud. This gave the extra clearance that I needed for the handlebars, but also really made the install look purposeful and clean. Even if I didn’t need the clearance, I think this is a good look.In the end I really like having the bikes up and out of the way. No more tipping over and a great upgrade for the garage organization. I highly recommend these mounts.