The Pro X DJ Facade Carrying Bag is the highest quality that I’ve seen for DJ Facades. You can feel it and see it once you’ve unboxed it. It’s truly incredible. Throughout my time as a DJ, I’ve bought more than one DJ Facade. The first one came with a carrying bag that was severely lacking in terms of padding. Within 2 months of usage, and careful handeling, it began to rip in the corners due to being too tight of a fit, and very having poor zippers. Then after 2 more DJ Facades, one of which was the excellent Rockville DJ Facade, which is taller and wider than most other facades, the included carrying bag fell apart rapidly. I’m extremely careful with my gear as it goes with me to many wedding events, and venues, so this was disappointing, as it cost more to buy it due to the included carrying bag.The Rockville Facade carrying bag was so bad that the corners of their DJ Facade, which have sharper closing joints, tore through their carrying bag, revealing nothing more than basic, exceptionally thin foam on the reinforcing edges of the bag. The zipper lasted roughly 2 weeks. By comparison, I have carrying bags that have lasted 5 years and still look brand new, with perfectly crafted zippers.The Pro X DJ Facade feels like it’s a higher quality than even the official EV and QSC protective covers that have served me well through multiple iterations of both sets of speakers. While the Pro X may be a DJ Facade carrying bag, it has such a strong, excellent quality zipper, which feels properly reinforced on the corners, that it’s on par with my American DJ lighting carry bag zippers. That’s impressive to me, because those lights were used frequently removed from those carrying bags for 3-4 gigs a week, for 3 years, as well as additional weddings and events. The other impressive aspect of the Pro X DJ Facade Carrying Bag is, the padding and the additional interior space. The Rockville DJ Facade’s additional height and width didn’t go right up to the edges of the Pro X Facade carrying bag, nor did it feel like a tight fit when I used either 4 or 6 panels of the Rockville DJ Facade. To put this into perspective, I purchased a 6 pannel DJ Facade from Rockville with an included bag. Their bag could only fit 4 pannels, and their Facade has to be fully assembled with screws. The Pro X carrying bag fit all 6 panels comfortably.The quality of the padding on the Pro X carrying bag feels as good as other top tier carrying bags I’ve owned. The material feels like a sturdy, textured canvas bag. This is important for many reasons. First and foremost, DJ Facades have stretched cloth and painted metal frames. When entering a venue, if the Facade carrying bag is thin, even lightly tapping the edge of a door can lightly scuff a DJ Facade’s paint, requiring spot correction. A Facade’s stretched cloth is also delicate, so seeing how thick and well padded the Pro X case is made me feel like it was well worth the price.This may be a long review, but it’s one based on years of experiencing sub par DJ Facade carrying bags, many of which come at an additional cost when buying expensive DJ Facades, and in many cases, some of the most expensive DJ Facades I’ve purchased don’t come with carrying bags at all. The Pro X carrying bag is wide and tall enough to carry my wooden, carpeted DJ Facade, my Rockville 4 or 6 panel DJ Facade, and my American DJ Facade. The carpeted one is incredibly heavy, and this is the first carrying bag that can accommodate it. The Pro X carrying strap feel properly reinforced as well, with an adjustment option to make carrying the Facade easier. This is one of the rare times when including a product photo isn’t needed because the product matches the advertising photos exactly.