A decade of custom stage tech just got boxed up and sold to everyone, and Gravity Rigs basically turned elite touring setups into grab-and-go gear with real prices attached.
Carry On Range launch
Carry On Range launch
- Gravity Rigs has crafted rigs for The Chemical Brothers and Burna Boy.
- After 10 years, the company rolled out the Carry On Range.
- Instead of one-off builds, buyers can grab ready-made systems.
- Those setups borrow the same road-hardened design chops.
- Each model is sized for flights and tight baggage rules.
- Solo artists, bands, and DJs can snag reliable playback.
- Durability drove the design, not flashy gimmicks.
- Transport safety over land and sea was baked in.
- Carry On 24 ties playback, instruments, and vocals together.
- This unit packs 24 analog outputs and four inputs.
- Multiple USB and dual Network MIDI ports expand hookups.
- Front panel buttons can be mapped for stage control.
- Carry On 64 runs fully digital on broadcast-grade hardware.
- High channel counts make complex routing doable.
- MADI connectivity forms a scalable backbone.
- Integration with modern consoles stays tight and seamless.
- Carry On 12 blends dual-computer switching with 12 analog outs.
- MIDI switching and network links come built in.
- One rack space stays open for extra show gear.
- Its price point keeps it upgrade-friendly.
- Carry On Zero offers a stripped rack and sleeve combo.
- Artists with their own tech get a rugged travel shell.
- Cabin-friendly sizing makes airport runs less stressful.
- Road-tested layout keeps gear locked and organized.
- Every rig ships inside a watertight protective case.
- Thicker custom foam boosts shock resistance.
- Two laptops can slide into the same case.
- Prices run from £695 up to £5945.