Most sizes of VESA mount have four screw-holes arranged in a square on the mount, with matching tapped holes on the device. The horizontal and vertical distance between the screw centres respectively labelled as 'A', and 'B'. The original layout was a square of 100mm. A 75 mm × 75 mm (3.0 in × 3.0 in) was defined for smaller displays. Later, variants were added for screens with as small as a 4 inches (10 cm) diagonal.
The FDMI was extended in 2006 with additional screw patterns that are more appropriate for larger TV screens. Thus the standard now specifies seven sizes, each with more than one variant. These are referenced as parts B to F of the standard or with official abbreviations, usually prefixed by the word "VESA".
Unofficially, the variants are sometimes referenced as just "VESA" followed by the pattern size in mm, which is slightly ambiguous for the names "VESA 50" (four possibilities), "VESA 75" (two possibilities) and "VESA 200" (three possibilities). However, if "VESA 100" is accepted as meaning the original variant ("VESA MIS-D, 100"), then all but "VESA MIS-E" and "VESA MIS-F, 200" have at least one unique dimension that can be used in this way, as can be seen from the tables below.
Notes for the edge mounts:
More details can be found by purchasing a copy of the standard itself,7 including rules to ensure cables don't prevent using the mounts.
More details can be found by purchasing a copy of the standard itself,9 including rules to ensure cables don't prevent using the mounts.
In practice, many screens that almost comply with part F of the standard deviate in various minor ways, and most brands of compliant brackets are designed to handle these deviations with little or no trouble for the end user:
Manufacturers of FDMI compliant devices can license the use of a hexagonal "VESA mounting compliant" logo.13
Many compliant or almost compliant devices do not display the logo, as is reflected by the absence of most key vendors from VESA's own public list of licensed manufacturers.14 Of the members of the standard committee (Ergotron, Peerless Industries, HP, Samsung, Sanus, ViewSonic and Vogel), only Ergotron is on the list.
As mentioned above under variant F, there are many almost compliant screens on the market, and some of those use the "VESA" name loosely to refer to their similar mounting patterns.
"FDMI Overview" (PDF). http://www.vesa.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/FDMI-Overview.pdf ↩
VESA Flat Display Mounting Interface Standard Version 1, Rev. 1, January 16, 2006 ↩
"Samsung f8500 specs". http://www.samsung.com/us/video/tvs/PN64F8500AFXZA-specs ↩
http://maritim.acte.no/getfile.php/1314779-1512130864/Maritime/Monitorer/ISIC/Datablader/DuraMON19_24_26_27_32%20MRA000000H-revision2.pdf [bare URL PDF] http://maritim.acte.no/getfile.php/1314779-1512130864/Maritime/Monitorer/ISIC/Datablader/DuraMON19_24_26_27_32%20MRA000000H-revision2.pdf ↩
VESA Mounting Compliance Logo, retrieved 2012-12-25 http://www.vesa.org/resources/mounting-standard/ ↩